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The therapeutic or prophylactic effect of exogenous melatonin against depression and depressive symptoms: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

European neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology
November 1, 2014
M V Hansen et al. (5 authors)
Journal ArticleMeta-AnalysisResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tReviewSystematic ReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to assess the therapeutic and prophylactic effects of melatonin in adult patients with depression or depressive symptoms.

Results Summary

Most studies showed no significant difference between melatonin and placebo in improving depression scores, though one study found a prophylactic effect and another a treatment effect. Meta-analyses did not show any significant effect of melatonin.

Population

Adult patients with or without depression at inclusion.

Effective Dosage

0.5-6 mg daily

Duration

2 weeks to 3.5 years

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (6)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
melatonin
decrease
depression scores
patients
-
showed an improvement
#1
melatonin
decrease
depression scores
-
-
showed an improvement
#2
melatonin
no change
depression scores
-
-
no significant difference
#3
melatonin
decrease
depression
-
-
showed a significant prophylactic effect
#4
melatonin
decrease
depression
-
-
found a significant treatment effect
#5
melatonin
no change
-
-
-
did not show any significant effect
#6
Abstract

Circadian- and sleep disturbances may be central for understanding the pathophysiology and treatment of depression. The effect of melatonin on depression/depressive symptoms has been investigated previously. This systematic review assesses the current evidence of a therapeutic- and prophylactic effect of melatonin in adult patients against depression or depressive symptoms. A search was performed in The Cochrane Library, PubMed, EMBASE and PsycINFO for published trials on November 14th 2013. Inclusion criteria were English language, RCTs or crossover trials. Our outcome was measurement of depression/depressive symptoms with a validated clinician-administered or self-rating questionnaire. PRISMA recommendations were followed and the Cochrane risk-of-bias tool used. Ten studies in 486 patients were included in the final qualitative synthesis and four studies, 148 patients, were included in two meta-analyses. Melatonin doses varied from 0.5-6 mg daily and the length of follow-up varied from 2 weeks to 3.5 years. Three studies were done on patients without depression at inclusion, two studies in patients with depression and five studies included a mixture. Six studies showed an improvement in depression scores in both the melatonin and placebo groups but there was no significant difference. One study showed a significant prophylactic effect and another found a significant treatment effect on depression with melatonin compared to placebo. The two meta-analyses did not show any significant effect of melatonin. No serious adverse events were reported. Although some studies were positive, there was no clear evidence of a therapeutic- or prophylactic effect of melatonin against depression or depressive symptoms.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
DepressionHumansMelatonin
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy30/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations43
Citations/Year3.9
Relative Citation Ratio1.75
NIH Percentile70.3%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.66
Normalized Score0.63
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