Title: Insomnia
1Insomnia
2InsomniaNICE TA 77, April 2004 CKS (Prodigy),
July 2006 DTB 2004
- Insomnia difficulty initiating sleep and/or
difficulty maintaining sleep - Prevalence estimates vary from 10 - 48
- Higher in women, with increasing age and in those
with concurrent physical or mental health
conditions - Primary insomnia
- Unknown origin or arising from sleep environment,
irregular sleep routine, or negative conditioning
to sleep - Secondary insomnia
- Underlying psychological or physical condition,
prescribed/OTC medicines, caffeine or substance
misuse - Important to avoid unrealistic sleep expectations
- For all people with insomnia, offer advice on
good sleep hygiene and stimulus control - Also consider exercise, relaxation therapies, etc.
3Non-drug approachesCKS (Prodigy), July 2006
- Sleep hygiene
- Avoid caffeine and nicotine 6 hours before bed
time - Avoid alcohol around bedtime (alcohol may
encourage sleep onset but tends to fragment
sleep) - Avoid heavy meals before sleep (although a light
meal may be helpful) - Avoid exercise within 4 hours of bedtime
(although exercise earlier in the day is
beneficial) - Minimise noise, light and excessive heat during
the sleep period. - Stimulus control measures
- Only go to bed when sleepy
- Only use the bed for sleeping and sex
- Leave the bedroom if not asleep within
1520 minutes and go back to bed only when
feeling sleepy again - Get up at a fixed time in the morning, regardless
of the amount of sleep achieved the previous
night - Avoid sleep during the day.
4Hypnotics for insomniaCSM, Curr Problems
Pharmacovigilance January 1988, No. 21SPCs for
zopiclone, zolpidem, zaleplon accessed from
emc.medicines.org.uk, July 2008
- Benzodiazepines should be used only if insomnia
is severe, disabling or subjecting the patient to
extreme distress - Use lowest dose, for maximum of 4 weeks
- Use intermittently, if possible
- Taper off gradually
- Zopiclone, Zolpidem
- Shortterm treatment of insomniain situations
where the insomnia is debilitating or is causing
severe distress for the patient - Longterm continuous use is not recommended
- Treatment duration a single course of treatment
should not continue for longer than 4 weeks
including any tapering off - Zaleplon
- Treatment duration a single course of treatment
should not continue for longer than 2 weeks.
5NICE guidance newer hypnotics (Z-drugs)NICE TA
77, April 2004
- No compelling evidence of a clinically useful
difference between the Z-drugs and shorter-acting
benzodiazepines from the point of view of their
effectiveness, adverse effects, or potential for
dependence or abuse - The drug with the lowest purchase cost should be
prescribed - Switching from one of these hypnotics to another
should only occur if a patient experiences
adverse effects considered to be directly related
to a specific agent. These are the only
circumstances in which the drugs with the higher
acquisition costs are recommended - Patients who have not responded to one of these
hypnotic drugs should not be prescribed any of
the others.
6What would happen to 13 people who take sleeping
tablets for more than a week?Glass J, et al. BMJ
20053311169
7Road traffic accidents and benzodiazepines
Bandolier 1998575 (Hemmelgarn B, et al. JAMA
199727827-31)
Risks of RTA in Quebec 1990-93 Short half-life
benzos RR 0.96 (95CI 0.88 to 1.05) NS Long
half-life benzos RR 1.28 (95CI 1.12 to 1.45),
higher risk in first week
8Hip fractures and benzodiazepinesWagner AK, et
al. Arch Intern Med 2004164156772
- Incident RR of hip fracture with BZD vs. no BZD
use based on US claims data (194,071 person years
of data, 1988-90) - Any BZD exposure 1.24 (95CI 1.06 to 1.44)
- Long half-life BZD only 1.13 (0.82 to 1.55) NS
- Short half-life high potency 1.27 (1.01 to 1.59)
- Short half-life low potency 1.22 (0.89 to 1.67)
NS - gt1 BZD type 1.53 (0.92 to 2.53) NS
- New BZD lt16 days 2.05 (1.28 to 3.28)
- New BZD 1630 days 1.88 (1.15 to 3.07)
- Continued BZD 1.18 (1.03 to 1.35)
- Authors conclude incidence of hip fracture
appears to be associated with benzodiazepine use. - Note Different doses were not considered.
9Other issues
- Some GPs have misperceptions about the safety and
efficacy of Z-drugs compared to benzodiazepines - Siriwardena AN, et al. Br J Gen Pract
2006569647 - Older people are not always being given
appropriate safety warnings about taking these
drugs - Iliffe S, et al. Aging Ment Health 200482428
- It is difficult to withdraw from hypnotic drugs
- A letter from the GP can be effective in helping
some to stop - Cormack MA, et al. Br J Gen Pract 1994445-8
- CBT can be helpful
- Morgan K, et al. HTA 20048 (8)
- See CKS guidance for further information
- Published criteria for clinical audit are
available - Shaw E, Baker R. Journal Clin Governance
2001945-50, NICE TA 77, April 2004
10Trends in prescribing of hypnotics in general
practice in England NHSBSA, September 2009
11Summary of key messages
- Non-drug treatments should be considered and used
routinely in all patients - 1988 CSM advice re benzodiazepines still stands
and is also applicable to Z-drugs - NICE guidance confirms that Z-drugs offer little
or no advantage over benzodiazepines - However overall prescribing of benzodiazepines
and Z-drugs is not decreasing - Long-term use of hypnotics is off-label and is
contrary to all available evidence and guidance - Think about auditing benzodiazepine and Z-drug
use and changing practice - Resources exist for managing withdrawal
- No evidence that new melatonin receptor agonists
offer advantages over existing hypnotics.