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Clinical Trials/NCT01161108
NCT01161108
Completed
Phase 3

A Randomized Controlled Trial Pilot Project to Evaluate the Efficacy of Melatonin in Children With Insomnia, Intractable Epilepsy and Neurodevelopmental Disabilities

The Hospital for Sick Children1 site in 1 country13 target enrollmentJuly 2010

Overview

Phase
Phase 3
Intervention
Fast Release Melatonin (FR MLT)
Conditions
Epilepsy
Sponsor
The Hospital for Sick Children
Enrollment
13
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Change in duration of nocturnal sleep time
Status
Completed
Last Updated
11 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The purpose of the study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of oral melatonin in improving sleep continuity in children with epilepsy and neurodevelopmental delay who have chronic insomnia by comparing Fast Release Melatonin (FR MLT) to placebo and Timed Release Melatonin (TR MLT) with placebo in a randomized cross-over design trial.

Detailed Description

Sleep disturbance in children is a universal concern. The prevalence of sleep disorders may be as high as 80% in children with neurodevelopmental disabilities. The majority of the parental complaints are with difficulty getting children to settle to sleep at night and stay asleep (insomnia). Two recent studies comparing children with epilepsy to matched controls or to sibling controls both concluded that children with epilepsy have more daytime sleepiness that may be due to underlying sleep disorders, and significantly greater sleep problems than their non-epileptic peers. Endogenous melatonin is thought to synchronize the sleep-wake pattern with the light-dark cycle of the normal day. Exogenous melatonin has been found to be effective in reducing sleep onset latency, increasing sleep duration, and increasing sleep efficiency in a meta-analysis of subjects with sleep disorders. The melatonin in fast release preparations is released quickly and has a short half-life of less than 1 hour. It is most helpful in decreasing sleep onset latency (the time to fall asleep). The melatonin in timed release tablets is released in a slower more sustained way and, in a small study in children with severe neurodevelopmental disabilities, was more useful for sleep maintenance. Fast release melatonin has been shown to be effective in a study of children with multiple disabilities and in one trial in children with epilepsy. Further rigorous evaluation of melatonin is needed as the validity of these studies is limited by their lack of blinding, small sample sizes, and subjective methods of sleep-wake outcome evaluations.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
July 2010
End Date
June 2012
Last Updated
11 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Crossover
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Shelly Weiss

Staff neurologist

The Hospital for Sick Children

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Children aged 5-17 years
  • Children with epilepsy with at least 2 partial or generalized seizures per month over the last 3 months prior to starting the trial
  • Children with neurodevelopmental disability, i.e. significant delay in development requiring special educational setting or educational assistant
  • Anti-epileptic drugs (AED's) expected to remain unchanged for duration of trial (14 weeks)
  • Not currently using melatonin or any other medication for sleep Subjects will be eligible if they have previous use of melatonin as long as there is a washout period of at least 1 week. Similarly, children taking natural health products for sleep will be included as long as there is a 30 day washout period prior to study enrollment.
  • Chronic insomnia - reported by parent(s) to include one of the following: sleep onset latency of greater than one hour, duration of sleep less than 8.5 hours per night with either/or both these problems occurring at least 3 nights per week and that have occurred 3 months prior to trial, or night wakings of more than 2 per night for same time period

Exclusion Criteria

  • Planned epilepsy surgery or change in AED's during treatment trial
  • Sleep disturbances that are treatable such as obstructive sleep apnea
  • Allergy or severe adverse effects to melatonin
  • Allergy or severe adverse effects to any of the ingredients of the study product or placebo (e.g. lactose)
  • Lactose intolerance
  • Breastfeeding
  • Known liver disease
  • Ketogenic diet
  • Other drugs being used for sedation
  • Immunosuppressive drugs

Arms & Interventions

Group A: Fast Release Melatonin

Subjects will be randomized to one of the two treatment arms and to the order of study medication v.s. placebo. The subject will undergo the assigned treatment for 7 weeks (3 weeks of study drug, a one week wash-out and 3 weeks of placebo, or vice versa).

Intervention: Fast Release Melatonin (FR MLT)

Group A: Fast Release Melatonin

Subjects will be randomized to one of the two treatment arms and to the order of study medication v.s. placebo. The subject will undergo the assigned treatment for 7 weeks (3 weeks of study drug, a one week wash-out and 3 weeks of placebo, or vice versa).

Intervention: Fast Release Placebo

Group B: Timed Release Melatonin

Subjects will be randomized to one of the two treatment arms and to the order of study medication v.s. placebo. The subject will undergo the assigned treatment for 7 weeks (3 weeks of study drug, a one week wash-out and 3 weeks of placebo, or vice versa).

Intervention: Timed Release Melatonin (TR MLT)

Group B: Timed Release Melatonin

Subjects will be randomized to one of the two treatment arms and to the order of study medication v.s. placebo. The subject will undergo the assigned treatment for 7 weeks (3 weeks of study drug, a one week wash-out and 3 weeks of placebo, or vice versa).

Intervention: Timed Release Placebo

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Change in duration of nocturnal sleep time

Time Frame: Baseline, Weeks 9 and 13

We will measure the sleep time between 7 pm and 9 am. The measures will be analyzed to determine the change from baseline and change between active treatment and placebo.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Sleep onset latency(Baseline, Weeks 9 and 13)
  • Sleep efficiency(Baseline, Weeks 9 and 13)

Study Sites (1)

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