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Clinical Practice Guideline for the Pharmacologic Treatment of Chronic Insomnia in Adults: An American Academy of Sleep Medicine Clinical Practice Guideline.

Journal of clinical sleep medicine : JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine
January 1, 1970
Michael J Sateia et al. (5 authors)
Journal ArticlePractice GuidelineHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of melatonin for treating sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia in adults.

Results Summary

The study suggests that clinicians should not use melatonin as a treatment for sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia in adults, based on weak evidence and low certainty of its efficacy.

Population

Adults with chronic insomnia.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (14)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
suvorexant
decrease
sleep maintenance insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians use
#1
eszopiclone
decrease
sleep onset and sleep maintenance insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians use
#2
zaleplon
decrease
sleep onset insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians use
#3
zolpidem
decrease
sleep onset and sleep maintenance insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians use
#4
triazolam
decrease
sleep onset insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians use
#5
temazepam
decrease
sleep onset and sleep maintenance insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians use
#6
ramelteon
decrease
sleep onset insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians use
#7
doxepin
decrease
sleep maintenance insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians use
#8
trazodone
no change
sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians not use
#9
tiagabine
no change
sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians not use
#10
diphenhydramine
no change
sleep onset and sleep maintenance insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians not use
#11
melatonin
no change
sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians not use
#12
tryptophan
no change
sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians not use
#13
valerian
no change
sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia
adults
-
suggest that clinicians not use
#14
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The purpose of this guideline is to establish clinical practice recommendations for the pharmacologic treatment of chronic insomnia in adults, when such treatment is clinically indicated. Unlike previous meta-analyses, which focused on broad classes of drugs, this guideline focuses on individual drugs commonly used to treat insomnia. It includes drugs that are FDA-approved for the treatment of insomnia, as well as several drugs commonly used to treat insomnia without an FDA indication for this condition. This guideline should be used in conjunction with other AASM guidelines on the evaluation and treatment of chronic insomnia in adults. METHODS: The American Academy of Sleep Medicine commissioned a task force of four experts in sleep medicine. A systematic review was conducted to identify randomized controlled trials, and the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) process was used to assess the evidence. The task force developed recommendations and assigned strengths based on the quality of evidence, the balance of benefits and harms, and patient values and preferences. Literature reviews are provided for those pharmacologic agents for which sufficient evidence was available to establish recommendations. The AASM Board of Directors approved the final recommendations. RECOMMENDATIONS: The following recommendations are intended as a guideline for clinicians in choosing a specific pharmacological agent for treatment of chronic insomnia in adults, when such treatment is indicated. Under GRADE, a STRONG recommendation is one that clinicians should, under most circumstances, follow. A WEAK recommendation reflects a lower degree of certainty in the outcome and appropriateness of the patient-care strategy for all patients, but should not be construed as an indication of ineffectiveness. GRADE recommendation strengths do not refer to the magnitude of treatment effects in a particular patient, but rather, to the strength of evidence in published data. Downgrading the quality of evidence for these treatments is predictable in GRADE, due to the funding source for most pharmacological clinical trials and the attendant risk of publication bias; the relatively small number of eligible trials for each individual agent; and the observed heterogeneity in the data. The ultimate judgment regarding propriety of any specific care must be made by the clinician in light of the individual circumstances presented by the patient, available diagnostic tools, accessible treatment options, and resources. We suggest that clinicians use suvorexant as a treatment for sleep maintenance insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians use eszopiclone as a treatment for sleep onset and sleep maintenance insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians use zaleplon as a treatment for sleep onset insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians use zolpidem as a treatment for sleep onset and sleep maintenance insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians use triazolam as a treatment for sleep onset insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians use temazepam as a treatment for sleep onset and sleep maintenance insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians use ramelteon as a treatment for sleep onset insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians use doxepin as a treatment for sleep maintenance insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians not use trazodone as a treatment for sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians not use tiagabine as a treatment for sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians not use diphenhydramine as a treatment for sleep onset and sleep maintenance insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians not use melatonin as a treatment for sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians not use tryptophan as a treatment for sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK). We suggest that clinicians not use valerian as a treatment for sleep onset or sleep maintenance insomnia (versus no treatment) in adults. (WEAK).

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Academies and InstitutesAdultCentral Nervous System DepressantsChronic DiseaseGABA ModulatorsHumansHypnotics and SedativesSleep Aids, PharmaceuticalSleep Initiation and Maintenance DisordersSleep Medicine SpecialtyUnited States
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy20/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations751
Citations/Year93.9
Relative Citation Ratio44.54
NIH Percentile99.9%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.30
Normalized Score0.45
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