Journal Article
Observational Study
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The use of melatonin in Danish intensive care departments-A nationwide observational study.

BACKGROUND: Melatonin is widely employed as a hypnotic in various patient groups. In intensive care patients, melatonin seems to be increasingly used due to potential clinical effects and a favourable safety profile.

OBJECTIVES: We aimed to investigate the extend of usage and clinical practice of melatonin therapy in intensive care departments in Denmark.

DESIGN: Data from regional hospital pharmacies and the Danish Intensive Care Database were used to estimate defined daily dose and defined daily dose per 1000 ICU admission days. Also, related expenses in the period 2015-2019. Finally, a questionnaire describing the clinical practice of melatonin therapy was provided to all Danish intensive care departments.

PRINCIPAL OBSERVATIONS: The usage of melatonin in intensive care departments in Denmark increased from 21,300 DDD (200.0 DDD per 1000 ICU admission days) in 2015 to 52,170 DDD (560.7 DDD per 1000 ICU admission days) in 2019. A total of 32 ICU departments participated in the study (97% of all Danish ICU departments). All included ICU departments employed melatonin as a hypnotic. Nineteen percent of included departments administered melatonin to all admitted patients, whereas 25% of departments rarely administered melatonin. Magistral melatonin 3-mg tablets was the most employed drug dose/formulation. Increased doses of melatonin were administered in selected patients. Melatonin was considered safe by prescribing clinicians.

CONCLUSIONS: Melatonin is widely and increasingly used in Danish intensive care departments. The more than doubled usage of melatonin in the study period advocates for further studies employing validated outcomes of sleep and other patient-relevant outcomes.

EDITORIAL COMMENT: This study documents that melatonin is frequently used as a hypnotic in Danish intensive care units during recent years despite a shortage of reliable evidence to support a recommendation to treat with melatonin in this context. These results support a need for conducting clinical trials to determine whether or not there is a beneficial effect of melatonin treatment in critically ill patients.

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