Yu Ze Yu, Peng Rong Yan, Cheng Nuo, Wang Rui Ting, Nan Meng Die, Milazzo Stefania, Pilkington Karen, Seely Dugald, Horneber Markus, Liu Jian Ping
Centre for Evidence-Based Chinese Medicine, Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, Beijing, China.
Dongzhimen Hospital, Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, Beijing, China.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2025 Apr 30;4(4):CD010145. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010145.pub2.
Preserving health-related quality of life is an aspect of care that requires constant attention from the time of cancer diagnosis. Melatonin has been used to diminish treatment-related side effects and cancer symptoms, and as a medication to regulate circadian rhythm. An up-to-date systematic review is needed to investigate the current evidence concerning possible beneficial effects of melatonin on quality of life and sleep in cancer patients.
To evaluate the benefits and harms of melatonin for preserving health-related quality of life and sleep in cancer patients.
To identify studies for inclusion in this review, we used CENTRAL, MEDLINE, 10 other databases, and four trial registers, together with reference checking, citation searching, and contact with study authors. The latest search date was 10 September 2024.
We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of adults (18 years or over) with histologically proven cancer of any stage that evaluated melatonin (alone or in combination with standard anticancer treatment) versus no treatment or placebo (alone or in combination with standard anticancer treatment), or standard anticancer treatment. Standard anticancer treatment refers to treatments to stop or prevent cancer, including chemotherapy, radiation therapy, surgery, immunotherapy, and hormonal therapies (such as androgen deprivation therapy).
The primary outcomes of interest were quality of life and sleep quality within three months, and melatonin-related adverse events. Other outcomes included survival, disease-free survival, progression-free survival, tumour response, and anticancer treatment-related harms.
We used Cochrane's risk of bias tool (RoB 1) to assess the risk of bias in the studies included in the review.
We synthesised results for each outcome using random-effects meta-analysis. The effect size was presented as risk ratio (RR) for dichotomous data and mean difference (MD) for continuous data, with 95% confidence intervals (CI). If this was not possible, due to the nature of the data, we synthesised results in a narrative format. We used GRADE to assess the certainty of evidence for each outcome.
We identified 30 RCTs (reported in 49 publications) involving 5093 adult participants with cancer (2470 males, 2228 females, 395 not reported). Studies were conducted in a hospital setting and took place in at least 10 countries. We assessed two studies at low risk of bias and the other 28 at high risk of bias.
Melatonin plus standard treatment versus placebo plus standard treatment The evidence is very uncertain about the effect of melatonin on quality of life score (MD 2.60, 95% CI -14.53 to 19.73; 1 study, 126 participants; very low certainty evidence), and sleep score (MD 2.80, 95% CI 0.18 to 5.42; 1 study, 50 participants; very low certainty evidence) within three months. We are also very uncertain about potential adverse effects of melatonin: headache (RR 2.77, 95% CI 0.33 to 23.14; 1 study, 25 participants; very low certainty evidence); fatigue (RR 1.02, 95% CI 0.90 to 1.17; 2 studies, 170 participants; very low certainty evidence); and nausea (RR 1.01, 95% CI 0.66 to 1.56; 1 study, 146 participants; very low certainty evidence). No data are available relating to dizziness. We downgraded the certainty of the evidence because of high risk of bias, small sample size, the width of the 95% confidence interval, and indirectness due to inadequate reporting of cancer type. Melatonin plus standard treatment versus standard treatment No data are available relating to quality of life and sleep within three months. The evidence is very uncertain about headaches (experienced by 15 of 820 participants in melatonin groups, with no data available for control groups; 2 studies, 1640 participants; very low certainty evidence). Melatonin likely reduces the incidence of fatigue (RR 0.46, 95% CI 0.39 to 0.55; 10 studies, 1359 participants; moderate-certainty evidence) and may reduce nausea (RR 0.85, 95% CI 0.72 to 1.00; 6 studies, 710 participants; low-certainty evidence). No data are available relating to dizziness. We downgraded the certainty of the evidence because of the high risk of bias and the width of the 95% confidence interval. Melatonin (topical use) plus standard treatment versus placebo plus standard treatment The evidence is very uncertain about the effect of melatonin on quality of life (one study reported no difference between groups, both having the same median score of 66.7; 48 participants; very low certainty evidence). No data are available relating to sleep and adverse events (including headache, dizziness, fatigue, and nausea). We downgraded the certainty of the evidence because of the high risk of bias, small sample size, and insufficient data.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The available evidence is of very low certainty, so we are unable to draw conclusions about the effects of melatonin on quality of life and sleep at three months in people receiving treatment for cancer. There may be no difference in adverse events between melatonin plus standard treatment and placebo plus standard treatment, but the evidence is very uncertain. Data were lacking for some outcomes, such as dizziness. Melatonin used alongside standard treatment probably reduces the risk of fatigue and may reduce nausea when compared to standard treatment alone. Since the evidence base for melatonin in people with cancer is limited due to insufficient data and risks of bias in study design, the decision for or against using melatonin as an adjunct to cancer treatment cannot easily be made at the current time.
This Cochrane Review was partially funded by AG Biologische Krebstherapie, Deutsche Krebshilfe (grant numbers 70-301 and 109863). The funding agency had no role in the design or conduct of the study.
The protocol for this review is available via DOI 10.1002/14651858.CD010145.
维持与健康相关的生活质量是癌症诊断后护理工作中需要持续关注的一个方面。褪黑素已被用于减轻治疗相关的副作用和癌症症状,并作为调节昼夜节律的药物。需要进行一项最新的系统评价,以研究当前关于褪黑素对癌症患者生活质量和睡眠可能产生的有益影响的证据。
评估褪黑素对维持癌症患者与健康相关的生活质量和睡眠的益处和危害。
为了确定纳入本评价的研究,我们使用了Cochrane系统评价数据库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、其他10个数据库和4个试验注册库,并进行参考文献核对、引文检索以及与研究作者联系。最新检索日期为2024年9月10日。
我们纳入了年龄在18岁及以上、经组织学证实患有任何阶段癌症的成年人的随机对照试验(RCT),这些试验评估了褪黑素(单独使用或与标准抗癌治疗联合使用)与不治疗或安慰剂(单独使用或与标准抗癌治疗联合使用)或标准抗癌治疗相比的效果。标准抗癌治疗是指用于阻止或预防癌症的治疗方法,包括化疗、放疗、手术、免疫治疗和激素疗法(如雄激素剥夺疗法)。
主要关注的结局指标是三个月内的生活质量和睡眠质量,以及与褪黑素相关的不良事件。其他结局指标包括生存率、无病生存率、无进展生存率、肿瘤反应以及抗癌治疗相关的危害。
我们使用Cochrane偏倚风险工具(RoB 1)评估纳入评价的研究中的偏倚风险。
我们使用随机效应荟萃分析对每个结局指标的结果进行合成。效应量以二分数据的风险比(RR)和连续数据的均值差(MD)表示,并给出95%置信区间(CI)。如果由于数据性质无法进行此操作,我们以叙述形式合成结果。我们使用GRADE评估每个结局指标证据的确定性。
我们确定了30项RCT(发表在49篇出版物中),涉及5093名成年癌症患者(2470名男性,2228名女性,395名未报告性别)。研究在医院环境中进行,至少在10个国家开展。我们评估两项研究偏倚风险低,其他28项研究偏倚风险高。
褪黑素联合标准治疗与安慰剂联合标准治疗 关于褪黑素对三个月内生活质量评分(MD 2.60,95%CI -14.53至19.73;1项研究,126名参与者;极低确定性证据)和睡眠评分(MD 2.80,95%CI 0.18至5.42;1项研究,50名参与者;极低确定性证据)的影响,证据非常不确定。关于褪黑素的潜在不良反应,我们也非常不确定:头痛(RR 2.77,95%CI 0.33至23.14;1项研究,25名参与者;极低确定性证据);疲劳(RR 1.02,95%CI 0.90至1.17;2项研究,170名参与者;极低确定性证据);以及恶心(RR 1.01,95%CI 0.66至1.56;1项研究,146名参与者;极低确定性证据)。没有关于头晕的可用数据。由于偏倚风险高、样本量小、95%置信区间宽以及癌症类型报告不充分导致的间接性,我们降低了证据的确定性。褪黑素联合标准治疗与标准治疗 没有关于三个月内生活质量和睡眠的可用数据。关于头痛的证据非常不确定(褪黑素组820名参与者中有15人经历头痛,对照组无可用数据;2项研究,1640名参与者;极低确定性证据)。褪黑素可能降低疲劳发生率(RR 0.46,95%CI 0.39至0.55;10项研究,1359名参与者;中等确定性证据),并可能降低恶心发生率(RR 0.85,95%CI 0.72至1.00;6项研究;710名参与者;低确定性证据)。没有关于头晕的可用数据。由于偏倚风险高和95%置信区间宽,我们降低了证据的确定性。褪黑素(局部使用)联合标准治疗与安慰剂联合标准治疗 关于褪黑素对生活质量的影响,证据非常不确定(一项研究报告两组之间无差异,中位数得分均为66.7;48名参与者;极低确定性证据)。没有关于睡眠和不良事件(包括头痛、头晕、疲劳和恶心)的可用数据。由于偏倚风险高、样本量小和数据不足,我们降低了证据的确定性。
现有证据的确定性非常低,因此我们无法得出关于褪黑素对接受癌症治疗的患者三个月内生活质量和睡眠影响的结论。褪黑素联合标准治疗与安慰剂联合标准治疗之间的不良事件可能没有差异,但证据非常不确定。一些结局指标缺乏数据,如头晕。与单独使用标准治疗相比,褪黑素与标准治疗联合使用可能降低疲劳风险,并可能降低恶心发生率。由于癌症患者使用褪黑素的证据基础因数据不足和研究设计中的偏倚风险而有限,目前难以就是否使用褪黑素作为癌症治疗的辅助药物做出决定。
本Cochrane系统评价部分由AG Biologische Krebstherapie、Deutsche Krebshilfe资助(资助编号70 - 301和109863)。资助机构在研究设计或实施过程中没有参与。
本评价的方案可通过DOI 10.1002/1465l858.CD010145获取。