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The potential of biomarkers for diagnosing insomnia: Consensus statement of the WFSBP Task Force on Sleep Disorders.

The world journal of biological psychiatry : the official journal of the World Federation of Societies of Biological Psychiatry
October 1, 2023
Dimitris Dikeos et al. (12 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the diagnostic usefulness of melatonin rhythm deficiency as a potential biomarker for insomnia.

Results Summary

The study found that deficient melatonin rhythm was among the biological measurements potentially useful for diagnosing insomnia, though further replication and standardized methodology are needed.

Population

Insomniacs (specific demographic details not provided).

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (15)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
psychometric instruments
no change
diagnosing insomnia
-
-
confirmed to be the gold standard
#1
polysomnography-derived cyclic alternating pattern
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
emerged as potentially useful diagnostic instruments
#2
actigraphy
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
emerged as potentially useful diagnostic instruments
#3
BDNF levels
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
emerged as potentially useful diagnostic instruments
#4
heart rate around sleep onset
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
emerged as potentially useful diagnostic instruments
#5
deficient melatonin rhythm
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
emerged as potentially useful diagnostic instruments
#6
certain neuroimaging patterns
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
emerged as potentially useful diagnostic instruments
#7
routine polysomnography
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
not shown to be of satisfactory diagnostic value
#8
EEG spectral analysis
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
not shown to be of satisfactory diagnostic value
#9
heart rate variability
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
not shown to be of satisfactory diagnostic value
#10
skin conductance
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
not shown to be of satisfactory diagnostic value
#11
thermoregulation
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
not shown to be of satisfactory diagnostic value
#12
oxygen consumption
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
not shown to be of satisfactory diagnostic value
#13
HPA axis
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
not shown to be of satisfactory diagnostic value
#14
inflammation indices
no change
diagnosis of insomnia
-
-
not shown to be of satisfactory diagnostic value
#15
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Thus far, the diagnosis of insomnia is based on purely clinical criteria. Although a broad range of altered physiological parameters has been identified in insomniacs, the evidence to establish their diagnostic usefulness is very limited. Purpose of this WFSBP Task Force consensus paper is to systematically evaluate a series of biomarkers as potential diagnostic tools for insomnia. METHODS: A newly created grading system was used for assessing the validity of various measurements in establishing the diagnosis of insomnia; these measurements originated from relevant studies selected and reviewed by experts. RESULTS: The measurements with the highest diagnostic performance were those derived from psychometric instruments. Biological measurements which emerged as potentially useful diagnostic instruments were polysomnography-derived cyclic alternating pattern, actigraphy, and BDNF levels, followed by heart rate around sleep onset, deficient melatonin rhythm, and certain neuroimaging patterns (mainly for the activity of frontal and pre-frontal cortex, hippocampus and basal ganglia); yet, these findings need replication, as well as establishment of commonly accepted methodology and diagnostic cut-off points. Routine polysomnography, EEG spectral analysis, heart rate variability, skin conductance, thermoregulation, oxygen consumption, HPA axis, and inflammation indices were not shown to be of satisfactory diagnostic value. CONCLUSIONS: Apart from psychometric instruments which are confirmed to be the gold standard in diagnosing insomnia, six biomarkers emerge as being potentially useful for this purpose.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansSleep Initiation and Maintenance DisordersHypothalamo-Hypophyseal SystemPituitary-Adrenal SystemSleepBiomarkers
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy65/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations12
Citations/Year6.0
Relative Citation Ratio3.78
NIH Percentile89.3%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score2.86
Normalized Score0.62
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