Efficacy and Safety of Gabapentin in Improving Sleep Quality of Patients with Sensory Nervous System Diseases: A Meta-Analysis

Altern Ther Health Med. 2023 Jul;29(5):380-385.

Abstract

Context: Sensory nervous-system diseases are chronic diseases that injury or disease of the somatosensory nervous system causes. Sleep disorders usually accompany these diseases, and in turn, worsen their conditions and form a vicious circle that brings great difficulties in clinical treatment.

Objective: The study intended to systematically evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of gabapentin in improving the sleep quality of patients with sensory nervous-system diseases using a meta-analysis, so as to provide evidence-based medical evidence for clinical treatment.

Design: The research team performed a comprehensive narrative review by searching the China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Chinese Scientific Journal (VIP), WANFANG, Chinese Biomedical Database (CBM), PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, and ClinicalTrials.gov databases. The search terms included gabapentin, 1-(aminomethyl)-cyclohexaneacetic acid, gabapentin hexal, gabapentin-ratiopharm, sleep, and insomnia.

Setting: The review took place in the Department of Neurology at the First People's Hospital of Linping District in Hangzhou, China.

Outcome measures: The research team extracted the data from the studies meeting the inclusion criteria and then transferred them into the Review Manager 5.3 software for meta-analysis. The outcome measures included scores: (1) for the improvement in the degree of sleep interference score; (2) for the improvement in sleep quality; (3) for the rate of poor sleep quality; (4) for the rate awakenings of >5 per night; and (5) for the incidence of adverse reactions.

Results: The research team found eight RCTs with 1269 participants, including 637 participants in a gabapentin test group and 632 participants in the placebo control group. The meta-analysis showed that the decrease in the degree of sleep interference [mean deviation (MD) = -0.86, 95% CI: (-0.91, -0.82), P < .00001] and the improvement in sleep quality [odds ratio (OR) = 2.64, 95% CI: (1.90, 3.67), P < .00001] in gabapentin group were significantly higher than those in placebo group (P < .05), while the rate of poor sleep quality [OR = 0.43, 95% CI: (0.23, 0.79), P = .007] and the rate of > 5 night awakenings [OR = 0.01, 95% CI: (0.05, 0.70), P = .01] in gabapentin group were significantly lower than those in placebo group (P < .05). No statistically significant differences existed in the incidence of adverse reactions between the two groups.

Conclusions: Gabapentin is safe and effective in improving the sleep quality of patients with sensory nervous-system diseases. Due to the limitations of sample size and types of diseases in the current study, the field needs multicenter, large-sample, and high-quality RCTs for further validation in the future.

Publication types

  • Review
  • Meta-Analysis

MeSH terms

  • Chronic Disease
  • Gabapentin / pharmacology
  • Gabapentin / therapeutic use
  • Humans
  • Multicenter Studies as Topic
  • Sleep / physiology
  • Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders* / drug therapy
  • Sleep Quality*

Substances

  • Gabapentin