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Current role of melatonin in pediatric neurology: clinical recommendations.

European journal of paediatric neurology : EJPN : official journal of the European Paediatric Neurology Society
March 1, 2015
Oliviero Bruni et al. (11 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to establish consensus on the roles of melatonin in children and provide treatment guidelines, focusing on its efficacy and safety in sleep disorders and other conditions.

Results Summary

Melatonin is effective for sleep onset insomnia and delayed sleep phase syndrome, reducing sleep onset latency and increasing total sleep time, but not night awakenings. It shows potential benefits in developmental disorders, seizures, and neuroprotection, with no serious adverse effects reported.

Population

Children, particularly those with developmental disorders such as autism spectrum disorder, ADHD, and intellectual disability.

Effective Dosage

Most effective when administered 3-5 h before physiological dim light melatonin onset; no advantage of extended-release over immediate-release noted.

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

Decreased CYP 1A2 activity (genetically or due to concomitant medication) can slow melatonin metabolism, requiring dose adjustment.

Extracted Claims (20)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
melatonin
decrease
sleep onset insomnia
children
-
best evidence for efficacy
#1
melatonin
decrease
delayed sleep phase syndrome
children
-
best evidence for efficacy
#2
melatonin
neutral
physiological dim light melatonin onset
-
3-5 h before
most effective when administered
#3
extended-release melatonin
no change
-
-
-
no evidence that confers advantage
#4
melatonin
decrease
sleep disturbance
children with developmental disorders, such as autism spectrum disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and intellectual disability
-
can benefit
#5
melatonin
decrease
sleep onset latency
children
-
decreases
#6
melatonin
increase
total sleep time
children
-
increases
#7
melatonin
no change
night awakenings
children
-
does not decrease
#8
Decreased CYP 1A2 activity
decrease
melatonin metabolism
-
-
can slow metabolism
#9
Decreased CYP 1A2 activity
decrease
melatonin level
-
-
loss of variation
#10
Decreased CYP 1A2 activity
decrease
melatonin effect
-
-
loss of effect
#11
Decreasing the dose
increase
loss of effect from decreased CYP 1A2 activity
-
-
can remedy this
#12
melatonin
no change
seizures
-
-
does not exacerbate
#13
melatonin
decrease
seizures
-
-
might decrease
#14
melatonin
decrease
headache
-
-
has been used successfully in treating
#15
melatonin
decrease
neuronal damage
-
-
neuroprotective effect
#16
melatonin
decrease
neuronal damage from birth asphyxia
-
-
suggesting a role in minimising
#17
melatonin
increase
sleep EEGs
-
-
can also be of value in the performance of
#18
melatonin
increase
brainstem auditory evoked potential assessments
-
-
can also be of value as sedation for
#19
melatonin
no change
adverse effects
humans
-
No serious adverse effects
#20
Abstract

BACKGROUND/PURPOSE: Melatonin, an indoleamine secreted by the pineal gland, plays a key role in regulating circadian rhythm. It has chronobiotic, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and free radical scavenging properties. METHODS: A conference in Rome in 2014 aimed to establish consensus on the roles of melatonin in children and on treatment guidelines. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: The best evidence for efficacy is in sleep onset insomnia and delayed sleep phase syndrome. It is most effective when administered 3-5 h before physiological dim light melatonin onset. There is no evidence that extended-release melatonin confers advantage over immediate release. Many children with developmental disorders, such as autism spectrum disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and intellectual disability have sleep disturbance and can benefit from melatonin treatment. Melatonin decreases sleep onset latency and increases total sleep time but does not decrease night awakenings. Decreased CYP 1A2 activity, genetically determined or from concomitant medication, can slow metabolism, with loss of variation in melatonin level and loss of effect. Decreasing the dose can remedy this. Animal work and limited human data suggest that melatonin does not exacerbate seizures and might decrease them. Melatonin has been used successfully in treating headache. Animal work has confirmed a neuroprotective effect of melatonin, suggesting a role in minimising neuronal damage from birth asphyxia; results from human studies are awaited. Melatonin can also be of value in the performance of sleep EEGs and as sedation for brainstem auditory evoked potential assessments. No serious adverse effects of melatonin in humans have been identified.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AnimalsChildCircadian RhythmFemaleHumansMaleMelatoninNeurologyPediatricsPractice Guidelines as TopicSleep
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy85/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations155
Citations/Year15.5
Relative Citation Ratio8.00
NIH Percentile96.8%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score1.00
Normalized Score0.86
Related Supplements
Current role of melatonin in pediatric neurology: clinical r... | Panacea Index