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The effect of melatonin on depressive symptoms and anxiety in patients after acute coronary syndrome: The MEDACIS randomized clinical trial.

Journal of psychiatric research
December 1, 2019
Michael Tvilling Madsen et al. (11 authors)
Journal ArticleMulticenter StudyRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine if melatonin could prevent the development of depression in patients following acute coronary syndrome (ACS).

Results Summary

Melatonin showed no significant prophylactic antidepressant effect compared to placebo, with no intergroup differences in depressive episodes, dropouts, or adverse events. A general reduction in depressive symptoms occurred in both groups.

Population

Adults free of depression at baseline, enrolled within 4 weeks after ACS.

Effective Dosage

25 mg administered 1 hour before bedtime.

Duration

12 weeks.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
melatonin
no change
depression
patients following acute coronary syndrome
no significant intergroup differences
showed no prophylactic antidepressant effect
#1
melatonin
no change
Major Depression Inventory (MDI) score
patients following acute coronary syndrome
no significant intergroup differences
no significant intergroup differences were found
#2
melatonin
increase
depressive episodes
patients following acute coronary syndrome
six
cumulative events of depressive episodes
#3
placebo
increase
depressive episodes
patients following acute coronary syndrome
four
cumulative events of depressive episodes
#4
-
decrease
depressive symptoms
patients following acute coronary syndrome
significant drop
a significant drop in depressive symptoms were present
#5
melatonin
no change
dropouts
patients following acute coronary syndrome
no intergroup differences
no intergroup differences were present
#6
melatonin
no change
adverse events
patients following acute coronary syndrome
no intergroup differences
no intergroup differences were present
#7
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Depression following acute coronary syndrome is prevalent and associated with increased mortality and morbidity. Melatonin may function as a primary prophylactic antidepressant substance and alleviate depressive symptoms. The study was undertaken to determine if melatonin administered following an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) could prevent development of depression. METHODS: The study was a double-blinded, placebo-controlled, multicenter, randomized clinical trial performed in five primary care cardiology departments at Zealand, Denmark. Included patients were adults patients, free of depression at baseline, included at the latest 4 weeks after acute coronary syndrome. Twenty-five mg melatonin or placebo was administered 1 h before participants' bedtime for 12 weeks. The primary outcome is Major Depression Inventory (MDI) measured every two weeks throughout the trial. Incidence of depression was apriori defined as MDI score ≥ 21 during the trial. Reported exploratory outcomes were patterns of dropout and safety outcomes. RESULTS: 1220 patients were screened and 252 participants were randomized in a 1:1 ratio. Baseline MDI score in the melatonin and placebo group were, respectively, 6.18 (CI 5.32-7.05) and 5.98 (CI 5.19-6.77). No significant intergroup differences were found during the study in the intention-to-treat analysis or per-protocol analysis. Cumulative events of depressive episodes during the 12 weeks were six in the melatonin group and four in the placebo group. A significant drop in depressive symptoms were present throughout the study period. No intergroup differences were present in dropouts or adverse events. CONCLUSIONS: Melatonin showed no prophylactic antidepressant effect following acute coronary syndrome. The non-significant results might be due to a type II error or melatonin might not be able to prevent development of depressive symptoms following ACS.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Acute Coronary SyndromeAgedAntidepressive AgentsAnxietyDepressionDepressive Disorder, MajorDouble-Blind MethodFemaleHumansMaleMelatoninMiddle AgedTreatment Failure
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy20/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations14
Citations/Year2.3
Relative Citation Ratio1.03
NIH Percentile51.2%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score2.30
Normalized Score0.61
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