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Neurocognitive effects of melatonin treatment in healthy adults and individuals with Alzheimer's disease and insomnia: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.

Dewan Md Sumsuzzman, Jeonghyun Choi, Yunho Jin, Yonggeun Hong
Meta-Analysis Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews 2021 90 citations

Study Design

Study Type
Meta-Analysis
Population
Adults with Alzheimer's disease (mild stage), insomnia, or healthy subjects across 22 RCTs
Duration
12 weeks
Intervention
Neurocognitive effects of melatonin treatment in healthy adults and individuals with Alzheimer's disease and insomnia: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.
Comparator
Placebo or no treatment (RCT controls)
Primary Outcome
Cognitive function measured by MMSE score
Effect Direction
Mixed
Risk of Bias
Moderate

Abstract

Endogenous melatonin levels are inversely associated with age and cognitive deficits. Although melatonin can improve psychopathological behavior disturbances in clinical trials, whether melatonin may also enhance cognitive function remains elusive. This study examined cognitive outcomes from randomized trials of melatonin treatment for Alzheimer's disease (AD), insomnia, and healthy-subjects. Twenty-two studies met the inclusion criteria (AD = 9, insomnia = 2, healthy-subjects = 11). AD patients receiving >12 weeks of melatonin treatment improved mini-mental state examination (MMSE) score [MD: 1.82 (1.01; 2.63) p < 0.0001]. Importantly, melatonin significantly improved MMSE score in mild stage of AD [MD: 1.89 (0.96; 2.82) p < 0.0001]. In healthy-subjects, although daytime melatonin treatment notably decreased in accuracy by correct responses [SMD: -0.74 (-1.03; -0.45) p < 0.00001], the reaction-time score on different stimuli (p = 0.37) did not increased. Additionally, by pooling of short-term, spatial, and visual memory scores, melatonin did not reduce memory function (p = 0.08). Meta-analysis of MMSE score suggested that melatonin is effective in treatment for mild stage of AD. Additionally, we propose that melatonin may be preferable to traditional hypnotics in management of insomnia.

TL;DR

Cognitive outcomes from randomized trials of melatonin treatment for Alzheimer's disease, insomnia, and healthy-subjects are examined and it is proposed that melatonin may be preferable to traditional hypnotics in management of insomnia.

Used In Evidence Reviews