MedPath

Risk and Benefit Assessment of Hypnotic Agents for Sleep Disorders Among Elderly

Conditions
Sleep Disorders
Interventions
Drug: Exposure to sedative-hypnotic drugs
Registration Number
NCT02648776
Lead Sponsor
China Medical University Hospital
Brief Summary

The aims of this study are to (1) examine the medication use patterns of commonly prescribed hypnotics and the factors that were associated with the long-term and short-term use patterns among the elderly population in Taiwan; (2)investigate the associations of using hypnotics with the elderly patients' disease statuses, efficacy and safety, as well as its pharmacokinetic and pharmacogenetic characteristics;(3) determine the clinical, economic and humanistic outcomes of using hypnotics and the corresponding contributing factors for the elderly in Taiwan.

Detailed Description

Aging is associated with the changes in the sleep structure, continuity, and timing while it also affects the elderly's physiological and psychological health statuses. Despite the fact that hypnotics are beneficial for the short-term management of insomnia, it is inconclusive about the risk and benefit ratios of long-term use for the elderly. The objectives of this study are to (1)examine the medication use patterns of prescribed hypnotics and the factors that were associated with the use patterns among the elderly population; (2)investigate the associations of using prescribed hypnotics with the elderly patients' disease statuses, efficacy and safety, as well as their pharmacokinetic and pharmacogenetic characteristics;(3)determine the clinical, economic and humanistic outcomes and corresponding factors of using hypnotics for long-term and short-term use in Taiwanese elderly.

This proposed study is the second part of a larger project that consists of two main phases across four years. The first part will include a retrospective database analysis to examine the medication use patterns for sleep disorders and corresponding outcomes using three data sets. Elderly patients aged 65 or older and who received hypnotics for insomnia will be selected from Taiwan's National Health Insurance Research Database, National Health Interview Survey and China Medical University Hospital (CMUH) in-house databases. Focus will be placed on benzodiazepines (BZD) and BZD-receptor specific non-BZD agents (Z-drugs), but Chinese traditional medication used for insomnia will also be examined.

This study is the second part of the larger project. The investigators will conduct a longitudinal, prospective, observational cohort study over a period of two years. The focus of this study is the use of hypnotic BZD and Z-drugs on elderly insomnia patients. The study cohorts include elderly patients, aged 65 years or older, who have received services in the outpatient departments of China Medical University Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan, and who have been prescribed with a selected BZD or Z-drug for insomnia for at least one week. A control group cohort will also be recruited. Each recruited patient will be monitored and evaluated periodically for at least one year. Economic, clinical, and humanistic outcomes, as well as adherence to the hypnotics will be assessed and monitored. Safety and tolerability will be assessed by occurrence of adverse drug reactions. Pharmacokinetic properties and genotyping patterns will be also be evaluated using snapshot blood sampling after the 6th month of enrollment in the study. The clinical and humanistic outcomes measures will include changes in insomnia status, functional status changes, depression status, as well as over-all well-being using EuroQol 5D. Economic evaluation will compare total insurance and out-of-pocket expenses at baseline and at 12 months follow up.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1400
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
EstazolamExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugsExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugs; Patients who have taken estazolam for at least one week before the first date of enrollment
LorazepamExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugsExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugs; Patients who have taken lorazepam for at least one week before the first date of enrollment
DiazepamExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugsExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugs; Patients who have taken Diazepam for at least one week before the first date of enrollment
AlprazolamExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugsExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugs; Patients who have taken Alprazolam for at least one week before the first date of enrollment
FlunitrazepamExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugsExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugs; Patients who have taken Flunitrazepam for at least one week before the first date of enrollment
ZolpidemExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugsExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugs; Patients who have taken Zolpidem for at least one week before the first date of enrollment
ZopicloneExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugsExposure to sedative-hypnotic drugs; Patients who have taken Zopiclone for at least one week before the first date of enrollment
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes from baseline in sleep quality at 12 monthsafter 12 months of enrollment

Clinical outcome, measured by a Chinese version of the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index

Number of participants with an occurrence of associated ADRafter 12 months of enrollment

Safety and tolerably, as measured by patients that experience falls, hip/limb fracture, cognitive impairment, etc. during the 12 months of enrollment

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Proportion of patients with CYP3A5 mutationsafter 6 months of enrollment

Pharmacogenetic evaluation and and genotyping of CYP3A5 enzyme for all enrolled patients with consent

Snapshot measurement of urine drug and metabolite concentrationsafter 6 months of enrollment

Pharmacokinetic evaluation by determining the levels of drug and metabolite in the patients plasma after established use -- and clearance after the sixth-month recruitments.

Snapshot measurement of plasma drug and drug metabolite concentrationsafter 6 months of enrollment

Pharmacokinetic evaluation by determining the levels of drug and metabolite in the patients plasma after established use

Calculation of drug clearance using snapshot plasma and urine concentrationsafter 6 months of enrollment

Pharmacokinetic evaluation by determining the patient's clearance of the drug after established use

Changes from baseline in IADL at 12 monthsafter 12 months of enrollment

Clinical outcome, as a measure of functional ability, measured by Instrumental Activities of Daily Living

Changes from baseline in insomnia at 6 monthsAfter 6 months of enrollment

Clinical outcome, measured by a Chinese version of the Athens Insomnia Scale

Changes from baseline in sleep quality at 6 monthsafter 6 months of enrollment

Clinical outcome, measured by a Chinese version of the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index

Changes from baseline in Barthel Index at 6 monthsafter 6 months of enrollment

Clinical outcome, as a measure of independence, measured by Barthel Index

Changes from baseline in Barthel Index at 12 monthsafter 12 months of enrollment

Clinical outcome, as a measure of independence, measured by Barthel Index

Changes from baseline in EQ-5D-5L & EQ-5D-VAS at 12 monthsafter 12 months of enrollment

Changes in humanistic variables, as measured by the EuroQol 5D tool

Changes from baseline in IADL at 6 monthsafter 6 months of enrollment

Clinical outcome, as a measure of functional ability, measured by Instrumental Activities of Daily Living

Changes from baseline in EQ-5D-5L & EQ-5D-VAS at 6 monthsafter 6 months of enrollment

Changes in humanistic variables, as measured by the EuroQol 5D tool

Changes from baseline in insomnia at 12 monthsAfter 12 months of enrollment

Clinical outcome, measured by a Chinese version of the Athens Insomnia Scale

Changes from baseline in MMAS-8 after 6 monthsafter 6 months of enrollment

Changes in medication adherence, as measured by the Morisky Medication Adherence

Changes from baseline in MMAS-8 after 12 monthsafter 12 months of enrollment

Changes in medication adherence, as measured by the Morisky Medication Adherence

Change from baseline in economic healthcare costs using NHI and out-of-pocket expenses at 12monthsAt 12 months after enrollment

NHI covered costs for inpatient and outpatient care taken from NHI data for the twelve months prior to enrollment, compared to the 12 months during enrollment. Added with patients' out of pocket expenses on health care.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

China Medical University Hospital

🇨🇳

Taichung, Taiwan

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath