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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00834886
Other study ID # 00834886
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 4
First received January 9, 2009
Last updated March 9, 2016
Start date October 2008
Est. completion date January 2012

Study information

Verified date March 2016
Source University of Bergen
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority Norway:National Committee for Medical and Health Research Ethics
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

In this study the investigators will examine the effects of melatonin and light therapy on delayed sleep phase syndrome in adolescents 16 up to 20 years old. 60 subjects will be randomized into four different groups; melatonin + light therapy (N=15), melatonin + placebo light (N=15), placebo + light therapy (N=15) and placebo + placebo light. This is a double-blinded treatment and the participants will receive this treatment for 2 weeks. Then they will be re-randomized into two groups; full treatment with light therapy + melatonin (N=30) and no treatment (N=30) for 3 months unblinded. The investigators will test the subjects pre-treatment, post 2 week treatment and after 3 months.


Description:

Delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS) is a circadian rhythm sleep disorder where the sleep-wake rhythm is significantly delayed according to the environmental demands. Hence, the symptoms consist of major difficulties falling asleep and problems awakening in due time and patients often experience work- and school related impairments (The International Classification of Sleep Disorders: Diagnostic and Coding manual, 2005). However, correct diagnosis is often not made and the treatment offered is, accordingly, often inadequate. DSPS normally develops in interplay between dysfunctional habits/behaviour and biological vulnerability.

Bright light therapy and administration of exogenous melatonin comprise the most common interventions. Timed bright light has been shown to effectively phase advance the rhythm (Rosenthal et al., 1990), but no standardized guidelines regarding the duration, intensity or timing of light exposure have been established. Compliance to the treatment is often poor because it involves structuring the daily schedule, which may be hard for the relevant age group. Similarly, administration of melatonin in the evening has been shown to phase advance the rhythm (Lewy et al., 1998; Mundey, Benloucif, Harsanyi, Dubocovich, & Zee, 2005), but a standardized approach for dose, duration and timing is lacking.

It is important to establish effective treatment guidelines for delayed sleep phase syndrome. Large scale studies on the effects of melatonin and bright light treatment in randomized placebo-controlled designs are needed. In a clinical trial we aim to investigate the efficacy of bright light and melatonin treatment using a 4 armed randomized placebo controlled design.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 40
Est. completion date January 2012
Est. primary completion date January 2012
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 16 Years to 25 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- 16-25 years old

- lives in the Bergen area

- has Delayed Sleep Phase Disorder

Exclusion Criteria:

- pregnant or nursing women

- other sleep disorders (i.e. sleep apnoea or PLMS)

- moderate to serious psychiatric disease

- use of psychopharmacological medicines

- in psychotherapeutic treatment

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Dietary Supplement:
Melatonin
Capsules, 3 mg, once every night
Other:
Bright light
Bright light therapy 10.000 lux by Miljølys AS
Placebo red light
Red light 400 lux as placebo light
Placebo capsule
Capsules containing 3 mng rice flour, once every night

Locations

Country Name City State
Norway University of Bergen Bergen

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Bergen

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Norway, 

References & Publications (2)

Saxvig IW, Wilhelmsen-Langeland A, Pallesen S, Vedaa O, Nordhus IH, Bjorvatn B. A randomized controlled trial with bright light and melatonin for delayed sleep phase disorder: effects on subjective and objective sleep. Chronobiol Int. 2014 Feb;31(1):72-86 — View Citation

Wilhelmsen-Langeland A, Saxvig IW, Pallesen S, Nordhus IH, Vedaa Ø, Lundervold AJ, Bjorvatn B. A randomized controlled trial with bright light and melatonin for the treatment of delayed sleep phase disorder: effects on subjective and objective sleepiness — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary To Investigate the Efficacy on Rise Time of Bright Light Therapy and Melatonin Treatment Using a 4 Armed Placebo Controlled Design. Main Outcome Measures: Sleep Log, Actigraphy and Psychological Tests. Sleep diary, rise time (when participants rise from bed in the morning, self-report) before and after a randomized controlled 4 armed treatment study including a follow-up 3 months later.
Midnight is 0000; in the outcome measure table the value is given in minutes after midnight.
i.e. 530 equals 08:50 in the morning.
1 day after two-week treatment ends Yes
Primary To Investigate the Efficacy on Subjective Sleepiness of Bright Light Therapy and Melatonin Treatment Using a 4 Armed Placebo Controlled Design. Main Outcome Measures: Sleep Log, Actigraphy and Psychological Tests. Subjective sleepiness; Karolinska sleepiness scale (KSS). The KSS is a scale in which the subjects rate their concurrent sleepiness level. The scale is verbally anchored with steps ranging from 1 ("very alert") to 9 ("very sleepy, fighting sleep, effort to stay awake"). 1 day after 2-week treatment ended No
Primary To Investigate the Efficacy on Sleep Onsel Latency of Bright Light Therapy and Melatonin Treatment Using a 4 Armed Placebo Controlled Design. Main Outcome Measures: Sleep Log, Actigraphy and Psychological Tests. Actigraphy, sleep onset latency (SOL). An actigraph is a wrist-worn movement sensor that objectively record motor activity. Participants used an event button to mark bed time and rise time. The actiwatch is waterproof and participants were instructed not to take it off at any time during the data collection peroid. 1 day after 2-week treatment ended No
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Recruiting NCT00282061 - Synchronization and Desynchronization Between Circadian Rhythms in Patients With Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome (DSPS) Phase 1