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Adaflex 2mg tablets

from£24.99

  • UK-licensed immediate-release melatonin 2mg tablets — for sleep onset insomnia in children with ADHD and short-term jet lag in adults
  • Tablets can be crushed and dispersed in water if swallowing whole is difficult (licensed use)
  • Available in five strengths (1mg, 2mg, 3mg, 4mg, 5mg) for precise dosing without tablet splitting
  • Prescriber-led supply after online consultation; paediatric initiation usually requires specialist input first
  • Pack size of 30 tablets

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Description

Product description: Adaflex 2mg Tablets (Pack of 30)

Until Adaflex 2mg tablets  came along, paediatric melatonin prescribing in the UK was complicated. After all, around 60% of all melatonin prescriptions in the UK went to under-18s, but most of that fell into off-label or unlicensed use.

So clinicians often had to pick between using adult products in children, prescribing unlicensed specials, or pointing families to over-the-counter melatonin from overseas — with all the quality and regulatory concerns each route brought.

Adaflex changed this. Specifically, it’s the first UK-licensed immediate-release melatonin tablet for sleep onset insomnia in children and adolescents with ADHD. So families and clinicians now have a UK-regulated choice designed for this group.

Where Adaflex fits in UK paediatric sleep care

The UK approach to children’s sleep problems follows a stepped path:

  • Step 1: Sleep hygiene — consistent bedtime routine, dark room, no screens 1-2 hours before bed, regular wake time, and daytime physical activity
  • Step 2: Address treatable causes such as anxiety, sensory issues, sleep apnoea, restless legs, or eczema flares
  • Step 3: Behavioural sleep work — especially for children with ASD or ADHD who benefit from a structured approach
  • Step 4: Melatonin under specialist guidance, where Adaflex is often the 1st-line tablet choice
  • Step 5: Liquid melatonin (Ceyesto, Colonis) for children who genuinely can’t take tablets even when crushed
  • Step 6: Prolonged-release options such as Slenyto (for autism) or Circadin (for adults) if night waking is the main issue
  • Step 7: Sleep clinic referral for hard-to-treat or complex cases

Adaflex sits at Step 4. So it’s a thoughtful step after sleep hygiene and behavioural work have been tried — not a first reach.

Adaflex vs Melatonin 1mg/ml Oral Solution

Key comparison with the liquid form:

  • Adaflex tablets are licensed, cost-effective, come in multiple strengths, and can be crushed and mixed with water
  • Melatonin 1mg/ml oral solution (Colonis, Ceyesto) covers similar uses, costs more, and sometimes contains propylene glycol or other excipients
  • Crushed Adaflex in water often works for children with swallowing difficulties
  • In contrast, the liquid form is for children who genuinely can’t manage any tablet
  • Adaflex is typically the more cost-effective NHS option
  • Both reach similar blood levels at equivalent doses

In short, most UK NHS formularies now point to Adaflex (or crushed Adaflex in water) before reaching for the liquid. After all, the licensed tablet form suits more children than people first thought.

Adaflex vs Slenyto

Different products for different sleep patterns:

  • Adaflex offers immediate-release tablets, licensed for ADHD-related sleep onset insomnia in 6-17 year olds
  • Slenyto offers prolonged-release tablets (1mg, 5mg), licensed for insomnia in children aged 2-18 with autism spectrum disorder
  • So Adaflex helps with falling asleep, while Slenyto helps with both falling and staying asleep
  • Slenyto’s slow release mimics natural overnight melatonin patterns
  • In contrast, Adaflex acts quickly and clears faster — useful for sleep onset alone
  • Many specialists start with Adaflex; if night waking is the main issue, Slenyto may suit better

Adaflex vs Circadin

Different products for different age groups:

  • Adaflex offers immediate-release tablets, licensed for children 6-17 with ADHD
  • Circadin offers prolonged-release tablets, licensed for adults 55+ with ongoing insomnia
  • So the two release profiles serve different clinical needs
  • Circadin isn’t licensed for children, although specialists sometimes use it off-label
  • In contrast, Adaflex isn’t licensed for routine adult insomnia — only for jet lag

Adaflex vs unlicensed melatonin

This is the key point about Adaflex’s licensed status:

  • Unlicensed melatonin (overseas supplements, specials brands, internet buys) has variable quality, uneven dosing, and no UK regulatory oversight
  • In contrast, Adaflex is UK-licensed, MHRA-regulated, with full quality control
  • Unlicensed melatonin can vary widely from label claims in real content
  • Some unlicensed products turn out to contain contaminants
  • So Adaflex offers regulatory certainty about what’s in each tablet

After all, the licensed difference matters most for children on long-term treatment. So a UK-licensed product gives parents and clinicians more confidence than an unregulated supplement.

Who Adaflex suits well

This product may suit:

  • Children aged 6-17 with ADHD whose sleep onset issues haven’t settled with sleep routines
  • Children with autism spectrum disorder, where a specialist has decided melatonin is appropriate
  • Children who can manage tablets, including crushed in water
  • Anyone already settled on a 2mg nightly dose of immediate-release melatonin
  • Adults travelling across multiple time zones who need jet lag treatment
  • Families who prefer a UK-licensed product over unlicensed supplements
  • People who need precise dose matching without splitting tablets
  • Patients whose treatment has already started under specialist care

Who might suit other options better

Other options may suit better:

  • Children with autism aged 2-18 who need sleep maintenance — since Slenyto covers this
  • Children under 6 — Adaflex isn’t recommended in this age group; specialist input matters
  • Adults 55+ with ongoing insomnia — since Circadin is the licensed choice
  • Children with severe swallowing difficulties who can’t manage crushed tablets — where the liquid form fits
  • People who wake through the night rather than struggle to fall asleep
  • Untreated obstructive sleep apnoea — since this needs targeted treatment, not melatonin
  • Pregnant or breastfeeding women — since melatonin isn’t recommended in pregnancy
  • People with autoimmune disease — caution applies; specialist input matters
  • People with epilepsy — since melatonin may affect seizure frequency in some
  • Anyone who needs an immediate sleep effect without titration — Adaflex builds up gradually

Courier Pharmacy supply

Adaflex 2mg is a UK Prescription-Only Medicine (POM). So supply only happens after our UK-qualified prescriber reviews your situation. For children, our prescriber will typically need evidence of specialist initiation (paediatrician, CAMHS, sleep clinic) before issuing ongoing supply.

Key features and specs

  • Active ingredient: melatonin 2mg per tablet
  • Form: white, round, biconvex tablets marked “2”
  • Tablet size: 9.5mm across, 3.8mm thick
  • Pack size: 30 tablets — typically 30 nights’ supply at 1 tablet per night
  • Age range: children from 6 years and adults
  • Typical paediatric dose: 1-5mg, taken 30-60 minutes before bedtime
  • Adult jet lag dose: 1-5mg for up to 5 days
  • Crushable: yes, can be crushed and mixed with water (a licensed use)
  • Food restriction: no food 2 hours before or after dose
  • Pregnancy: not recommended
  • Breastfeeding: not recommended
  • Storage: as labelled, typically room temperature
  • Legal status: Prescription-Only Medicine (POM)
  • Marketing Authorisation Number: PL 52497/0002
  • Maker: AGB-Pharma AB (Sweden)

Additional information

Quantity

1 x 30, 2 x 30, 3 x 30

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Written By
Shazlee Ahsan
BSc Pharmacy, Independent Prescriber, PgDip Endocrinology, MSc Endocrinology, PgDip Infectious Diseases

Superintendant Pharmacist, Independent Prescriber


Checked By
Safdar Ali
BSc Pharmacy

Pharmacist


Adaflex 2mg Tablets — UK-Licensed Melatonin for Children with ADHD

Adaflex 2mg tablets are the first UK-licensed melatonin specifically for sleep onset insomnia in children and adolescents aged 6-17 with ADHD. So the licensed status matters — until Adaflex, much paediatric melatonin prescribing in the UK was off-label or unlicensed. Made by AGB-Pharma AB in Sweden, the tablets come in 1mg, 2mg, 3mg, 4mg, and 5mg strengths. This 2mg pack of 30 is a common choice for established users on a 2mg nightly dose. Important: paediatric use typically needs specialist initiation, and the timing of each dose matters as much as the dose itself.

At Courier Pharmacy, we believe in treatment that fits the person.

This page covers what Adaflex is, why its licensed status changes the picture for paediatric melatonin, how it compares to other forms, and the practical points that matter most.

Five key takeaways

  • Adaflex is a UK Prescription-Only Medicine (POM). So supply only happens after our UK-qualified prescriber reviews your situation. For children, treatment is usually initiated by a paediatrician, CAMHS, or sleep specialist before our service takes on ongoing supply
  • First UK-licensed immediate-release melatonin tablet for children with ADHD-related sleep onset insomnia. After all, before Adaflex’s licensing, much paediatric melatonin came from unlicensed or off-label sources — Adaflex changed that picture
  • Available in five strengths (1mg, 2mg, 3mg, 4mg, 5mg) so doses can be matched exactly without splitting tablets. In particular, the 1mg tablet is unique — no other UK melatonin tablet comes in that strength
  • Tablets can be crushed and mixed with water — this is a licensed use, so it suits children with swallowing difficulties. As a result, the tablet form often works even where a liquid was first thought to be needed
  • Critical practical points: take 30-60 minutes before bedtime, and avoid food for 2 hours before and 2 hours after the dose. Specifically, food can almost double the absorption, which affects the timing of the sleep effect

Why choose Courier Pharmacy for Adaflex

At Courier Pharmacy, our approach starts with a simple idea: treatment should fit the person, not force the person to fit the system.

Dr Ada Jex-Cori

Our service is shaped by the philosophy of Dr Ada Jex-Cori, our brand pharmacist.

Dr Ada represents the spirit of the pharmacy: evidence-led, community-rooted, and willing to challenge the one-size-fits-all approach to medicine. She is named in honour of three pioneering women in science: Ada Lovelace, the mathematician and visionary; Sophia Jex-Blake, the first female doctor in the UK who fought the medical establishment; and Gerty Cori, the biochemist and Nobel Prize winner.

In our fictional world of Ethrewell, Dr Ada fights against pharma’s standardised approach to medicine. In the real world, she represents what we stand for. Her view is straightforward: you are not broken. The system is. And we are here to change that.

Dr Ada Jex Cori at courierpharmacy.co.uk holding a coupon

Sleep difficulties deserve serious attention

Children’s sleep problems often get dismissed as parenting issues or behavioural difficulties. Courier Pharmacy is different. So we recognise that:

  • Children with ADHD often have biological sleep timing differences
  • Sleep hygiene matters, but it isn’t always enough
  • The whole family suffers when a child’s sleep is broken
  • Untreated sleep difficulties affect school, mood, and family functioning
  • Adaflex can be a meaningful part of the solution, not the whole solution

After all, addressing sleep in these children often improves daytime functioning across the board. So our pharmacist takes paediatric sleep difficulties seriously, not as a minor concern.

The licensed melatonin difference

This matters more than many parents realise:

  • Adaflex is UK-licensed for paediatric ADHD-related insomnia
  • Most paediatric melatonin in the UK was historically unlicensed or off-label
  • Unlicensed products have variable quality and inconsistent dosing
  • Adaflex’s pharmaceutical-grade quality control means each tablet contains what the label says
  • MHRA regulation provides ongoing safety monitoring
  • If we’re prescribing for children, the licensed option matters

Honest framing about specialist initiation

Most paediatric melatonin treatment starts with a specialist, not a GP or online pharmacy. So:

  • Paediatricians, CAMHS, or sleep specialists usually initiate treatment
  • They identify the specific sleep pattern (onset issues vs maintenance issues)
  • They rule out other causes (sleep apnoea, restless legs, behavioural issues, mental health)
  • They establish the right dose and timing
  • Online prescribers (including ours) typically take over stable supply rather than starting from scratch
  • If you don’t yet have specialist input, we’ll suggest seeing your GP for referral first

Sleep difficulties and the bigger picture

Sleep problems often connect to wider patterns. So our pharmacist can discuss:

  • Sleep in children with autism, ADHD, or neurodevelopmental conditions
  • The role of sleep hygiene alongside medication
  • Sensory processing and sleep environment
  • Anxiety, mood, and sleep onset
  • Mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS) and sleep disruption
  • Hormonal changes and sleep (perimenopause, menopause)
  • Delayed sleep wake phase disorder in teenagers
  • Restless legs, periodic limb movements, and night-time disturbance

Sometimes the sleep problem is the visible part of a wider story — and that’s worth talking through.

Pharmacist support before and after purchase

Our pharmacist is here to discuss:

  • Whether Adaflex is the right form for your situation
  • How to use it correctly — particularly the timing and food restrictions
  • Tablet crushing technique for children with swallowing difficulties
  • Different strength options if titrating doses
  • How to handle the annual treatment break
  • When to ask for specialist review

This is free and on hand before and after purchase.

Trust earned, not claimed

We are GPhC-regulated, and our content is grounded in the BNF, BNFc (BNF for children), NICE clinical knowledge summaries on ADHD and insomnia, NHS guidance, and the real experience of families managing paediatric sleep difficulties.

If Adaflex isn’t the right answer for your situation, we’ll tell you honestly. After all, prescribing the right treatment matters more than fulfilling a request.

How to buy Adaflex from Courier Pharmacy

Adaflex 2mg tablets are a UK Prescription-Only Medicine (POM). So supply needs a prescription, which our prescriber issues after an online consultation.

How our service works

  1. Add the product to your basket and complete the online consultation
  2. The consultation covers your sleep history, prior treatments tried, specialist input (for paediatric use), current medicines, allergies, and relevant medical history
  3. For paediatric patients, you’ll typically need to provide evidence of specialist initiation (paediatrician letter, CAMHS treatment plan, or hospital prescription)
  4. Our UK-qualified prescriber reviews your answers to confirm suitability
  5. Once approved, your prescription is dispensed and sent out in plain, unbranded packaging
  6. Free pharmacist and prescriber support is on hand before and after your purchase

When other options might suit better

If Adaflex isn’t right, we’ll explain why. Other options may include:

  • Different Adaflex strength (1mg, 3mg, 4mg, 5mg) if dose adjustment is needed
  • Melatonin 1mg/ml oral solution: liquid form for children genuinely unable to take tablets
  • Slenyto prolonged-release: licensed for autism-related insomnia ages 2-18
  • Circadin 2mg prolonged-release: licensed for primary insomnia in adults 55+
  • Sleep hygiene and behavioural sleep approaches: usually the right first step
  • GP referral to CAMHS or paediatric sleep specialist: for unassessed paediatric sleep difficulties
  • Sleep clinic referral: for adults with complex sleep issues
  • Treatment of obstructive sleep apnoea: if breathing-related sleep disruption is present
  • Mental health support: where anxiety or low mood is driving sleep difficulty

Our community service

Our free fortnightly drop-in clinics at Insomnia, Derby run every other week from 10am to 12pm.

Healthcare shouldn’t only happen when you’re paying for it. So we show up, even when it’s free.

We cover sleep difficulties, ADHD, autism support, MCAS, CFS, fibromyalgia, dermatology, eczema, allergies, asthma, hair loss, men’s and women’s health, digestive health, weight management, and whatever else people bring through the door. No appointment needed, no charge, no pressure.

Dr Ada Jex Cori at courierpharmacy.co.uk holding a coffee 2

Active ingredient

Each Adaflex 2mg tablet contains:

  • Melatonin 2mg: a hormone naturally produced by the pineal gland that regulates the sleep-wake cycle

Why melatonin

Melatonin is unusual among sleep medicines. So it's worth understanding what makes it different:

  • It's a natural hormone, not a synthetic drug — the molecule given as medicine is identical to the body's own melatonin
  • It works through specific MT1 and MT2 receptors in the brain's master clock (the suprachiasmatic nucleus)
  • It signals "time to sleep" rather than forcing sleep through brain-wide sedation
  • It doesn't cause the cognitive effects, dependence, or rebound insomnia of benzodiazepines or Z-drugs
  • Tolerance and addiction haven't been demonstrated with regular use
  • Particularly well-suited to children where stronger sedatives aren't appropriate

Why Adaflex specifically

Several features set Adaflex apart from other UK melatonin products:

  • First UK-licensed immediate-release melatonin tablet for paediatric ADHD-related insomnia
  • Five strengths (1mg, 2mg, 3mg, 4mg, 5mg) for precise dose matching
  • Only UK melatonin tablet available in 1mg — aligns with NICE-recommended starting dose
  • Licensed for tablet crushing and water dispersion (suits swallowing difficulties)
  • Pharmaceutical-grade quality control, unlike unlicensed melatonin supplements
  • Generally more cost-effective than liquid melatonin formulations
  • 1st-line option in many UK NHS formularies for paediatric melatonin use

In short, Adaflex was developed specifically for the UK paediatric ADHD sleep onset market. So it fills a real gap, since the alternative was often unlicensed specials or off-label use of adult products.

Why the 2mg strength

2mg sits in the standard dosing range:

  • NICE recommends a starting dose of 1-2mg for paediatric melatonin
  • Many children stabilise on 2mg as their effective ongoing dose
  • Higher than 1mg suits children who didn't respond to the lower dose
  • Lower than the higher strengths (3mg, 4mg, 5mg) for ongoing maintenance
  • Most prescribers titrate up from 1-2mg, so the 2mg pack is commonly the next step

Other ingredients

Each tablet also contains:

  • Microcrystalline cellulose (bulking agent)
  • Calcium hydrogen phosphate dihydrate (bulking agent)
  • Magnesium stearate (lubricant)

Notably, this is a relatively clean ingredient profile. So Adaflex doesn't contain propylene glycol, sorbitol, or other excipients that can be a concern in certain patient groups (compared to some liquid melatonin formulations).

What the tablets look like

Adaflex 2mg tablets are:

  • White, round, biconvex tablets
  • 5mm diameter, 3.8mm thickness
  • Marked "2" on one side
  • Easy to identify within the Adaflex range (each strength has its number printed)

Maker

Adaflex is made by AGB-Pharma AB, a Swedish pharmaceutical company specialising in paediatric melatonin. So AGB-Pharma developed Adaflex specifically for the UK paediatric sleep market and obtained UK marketing authorisation. The UK distributor is AGB-Pharma AB, with the Marketing Authorisation Number PL

Dr Ada Jex Cori measuring active pharmaceutical ingredients on a weighing scale courierpharmacy.co.uk

What is Adaflex for?

Adaflex is licensed for two specific situations. So the main UK use is sleep onset insomnia in children and adolescents aged 6-17 with ADHD, where sleep hygiene measures haven't been enough. The second licensed use is short-term treatment of jet lag in adults. In addition, prescribers may use Adaflex off-label for autism-related sleep onset insomnia where this clinical decision fits.

Who is it for?

Adaflex 2mg may suit:

  • Children and adolescents aged 6-17 with ADHD whose sleep onset insomnia hasn't settled with good sleep routines
  • Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) where a prescriber has decided melatonin is appropriate (off-label use)
  • Adults with significant jet lag from travel across multiple time zones
  • Children who can now swallow tablets, including those who previously needed liquid form
  • Anyone established on 2mg of immediate-release melatonin nightly
  • People wanting a licensed product instead of unlicensed specials

What does it do?

Melatonin signals to the brain that it's time to sleep. So during normal night-time, the pineal gland naturally releases melatonin as light levels drop. This melatonin binds to receptors in the brain that promote sleep onset and shift the body clock. Taking Adaflex adds to or replaces this natural signal — particularly useful when the body's own melatonin timing is delayed or insufficient.

What it doesn't do

Adaflex doesn't "knock you out" like sedatives. So it doesn't typically cause heavy sedation, hangover effects, or dependence. It also doesn't help maintenance sleep through the night — its main effect is on falling asleep. In addition, Adaflex isn't a cure for ADHD, autism, or any underlying condition affecting sleep. Sleep hygiene measures should continue alongside Adaflex, not be replaced by it.

Dr Ada Jex Cori countring sheep for insomnia courierpharmacy.co.uk

How Adaflex works

Adaflex works through the same biological mechanism as the body's natural melatonin. So understanding how this works helps explain why timing matters and why it suits specific sleep problems.

The circadian rhythm mechanism

Your body has a master clock in the brain called the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). Specifically:

  1. The SCN runs on roughly a 24-hour cycle (the circadian rhythm)
  2. Light entering the eyes signals the SCN that it's daytime, suppressing melatonin release
  3. As darkness falls, the SCN signals the pineal gland to start releasing melatonin
  4. Melatonin levels rise through the evening, signalling "time to sleep"
  5. Levels peak in the middle of the night, then fall as morning approaches
  6. This natural rhythm coordinates with the sleep-wake cycle

Taking Adaflex adds to this natural signal — particularly useful when the natural signal isn't strong enough or isn't timed correctly.

Why immediate-release matters

Adaflex is an immediate-release tablet, which means:

  • Melatonin is absorbed quickly after swallowing
  • Blood levels peak within about 30-60 minutes
  • Mimics a quick burst of natural melatonin
  • Particularly suited to sleep onset problems
  • Clears from the body faster than prolonged-release forms
  • Less likely to cause morning grogginess than longer-acting forms

In contrast, prolonged-release products (like Circadin or Slenyto) release melatonin over several hours. After all, the right release profile depends on what's wrong with sleep — onset versus maintenance versus both.

Why timing matters so much

This is the single most important practical point with Adaflex:

  • Taken 30-60 minutes before desired bedtime: shifts sleep onset earlier
  • Taken at the right time, melatonin reinforces the natural sleep signal
  • Taken too early in the evening: can actually delay sleep onset
  • Taken too late: may have little effect
  • Taken in the morning: can disrupt circadian rhythm and worsen sleep
  • Consistency matters — same time each night helps reset the body clock

Why food timing matters

Adaflex has a specific food restriction — no food for 2 hours before or 2 hours after the dose:

  • Food can increase melatonin absorption almost two-fold
  • Carbohydrate-rich meals may impair blood glucose control for several hours when combined with melatonin
  • Inconsistent food intake leads to inconsistent melatonin effect
  • This is one of the most often-missed practical points
  • For evening dosing, finish dinner at least 2 hours before the melatonin dose
  • Don't eat between taking Adaflex and going to sleep

Why Adaflex suits children with ADHD

Specific biology helps explain this:

  • Children with ADHD often have delayed melatonin onset (their evening melatonin rise starts later)
  • Adding melatonin earlier than the body's natural release can advance sleep onset
  • This addresses the biological sleep issue, not just the behavioural one
  • It's why sleep hygiene alone often isn't enough in children with ADHD
  • Improving sleep often improves daytime ADHD symptoms
Dr Ada Jex Cori at courierpharmacy.co.uk thinking and looking into the distance

How to use Adaflex tablets

This summary is for reference only. The definitive guide is the patient information leaflet supplied with the tablets. So if anything isn't clear, contact our pharmacist or prescriber.

Standard application — paediatric ADHD-related sleep onset insomnia

For children aged 6-17 with ADHD:

  1. Starting dose: 1-2mg, taken 30-60 minutes before bedtime
  2. If no improvement after 1-2 weeks, the dose can be increased by 1mg each week
  3. Maximum daily dose: 5mg
  4. Find the lowest effective dose and stick with it
  5. Review treatment effect after 3 months — stop if no benefit
  6. Regular review every 6 months while continuing
  7. Annual treatment break to assess whether melatonin is still needed

Adult use — jet lag

For jet lag in adults:

  1. Standard dose: 1-5mg for up to 5 days
  2. Take at the time of bedtime at the destination
  3. Particularly useful for journeys of 5 time zones or longer, especially travelling east
  4. Don't take before 20:00 or after 04:00 local time at destination
  5. Maximum: 16 treatment periods per year

How to take the tablets

Several approaches work:

  • Swallow whole with a glass of water
  • OR crush the tablet and mix with a small amount of water immediately before taking
  • OR for children with swallowing difficulties, the crushed tablet can be mixed with a tiny amount of soft food (yoghurt, jam)
  • Don't crush in advance — crush just before taking to avoid melatonin degrading
  • Don't split tablets to get half doses — instead, ask the prescriber for the appropriate strength

The food restriction — important practical points

Get this right or absorption will be inconsistent:

  • Don't eat for 2 hours before taking Adaflex
  • Don't eat for 2 hours after taking Adaflex
  • Plan dinner 2+ hours before bedtime
  • Don't snack between dose and sleep
  • This restriction matters more than people realise — it's why some children seem to respond inconsistently
  • Water and small sips of clear fluids are fine

Important timing rules

Get the timing right:

  • Take 30-60 minutes before desired bedtime — not before
  • Take at the same time each night for consistency
  • Don't take with food (see above)
  • Don't take with alcohol — alcohol disrupts sleep and reduces melatonin's effect
  • Don't take if there will be bright light exposure (TV, phones, tablets) for the next 30-60 minutes — light suppresses melatonin's action
  • Don't change the timing without prescriber advice

What if you miss a dose?

Skip it. So:

  • Don't take a missed dose later in the night — it can disrupt the circadian rhythm
  • Don't take it in the morning to "catch up"
  • Just resume the normal schedule the following night
  • One missed dose won't undo accumulated benefit

Stopping treatment

Stopping is generally straightforward:

  • No tapering or gradual reduction needed
  • Annual treatment breaks are recommended to assess ongoing need
  • Sleep difficulties may return after stopping — this is normal
  • Some children use melatonin for years; others use it for shorter periods
  • Discuss long-term use with prescriber periodically

Storage

  • Store at room temperature as labelled
  • Keep in the original blister pack to protect tablets
  • Keep out of sight and reach of children
  • Don't use after the expiry date
  • Don't share with other household members
Dr Ada Jex Cori taking a pill with water courierpharmacy.co.uk

Warnings and precautions

Don't use Adaflex if you

Don't use Adaflex if you:

  • Have a known allergy to melatonin or any other ingredient
  • Are pregnant — melatonin crosses the placenta and pregnancy safety isn't established
  • Are breastfeeding — melatonin is excreted in breast milk
  • Are a woman of childbearing potential not using effective contraception
  • Are under 6 years (paediatric use under 6 needs specialist input rather than standard prescribing)

Use with care if you

Talk to our prescriber before using if you:

  • Have an autoimmune disease (rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, multiple sclerosis) — melatonin may affect immune function
  • Have epilepsy or a history of seizures — melatonin may affect seizure frequency in some people
  • Have moderate to severe liver impairment — Adaflex isn't recommended in this group
  • Have kidney problems — limited data on use in significant renal impairment
  • Have asthma — limited data; specialist guidance may be needed
  • Take fluvoxamine (an SSRI antidepressant) — significantly raises melatonin levels
  • Take warfarin or other anticoagulants — melatonin may potentiate effects
  • Take diabetes medicines — melatonin combined with carbohydrate meals may affect blood glucose
  • Are a smoker — smoking reduces melatonin levels

Obstructive sleep apnoea

Important consideration:

  • If sleep problems include loud snoring, gasping, or breathing pauses during sleep, this could be obstructive sleep apnoea
  • OSA needs targeted treatment (CPAP, weight loss, surgery) rather than melatonin
  • Melatonin in untreated OSA can mask the underlying problem
  • Our prescriber will ask about snoring and breathing pauses to screen for OSA

Diabetes considerations

Specific point about diabetes:

  • Melatonin combined with carbohydrate-rich meals may impair blood glucose control
  • This is one reason for the 2-hour food restriction before and after dosing
  • People with diabetes should monitor blood glucose carefully when starting Adaflex
  • Tell your prescriber if you're on insulin or other diabetes medicines

Driving and machinery

Adaflex causes moderate drowsiness:

  • Don't drive immediately after taking Adaflex
  • Avoid driving and operating machinery within several hours of taking the dose
  • This typically isn't an issue since Adaflex is taken before bed
  • If morning drowsiness persists, talk to your prescriber
  • Older adolescents on Adaflex should be careful about morning driving until effects are established

Use in children

Specific considerations:

  • Not recommended for under-6s with ADHD
  • Specialist initiation usually required (paediatrician, CAMHS, sleep clinic)
  • Regular review every 3-6 months while on treatment
  • Annual treatment break to reassess need
  • Sleep hygiene measures should continue alongside medication
  • Monitor for behavioural changes — most are mild but report any concerns

Use in older adults

Older adults can use Adaflex with considerations:

  • Adaflex is licensed for jet lag in adults, not for routine adult insomnia
  • For adults 55+ with primary insomnia, Circadin (prolonged-release) is the licensed option
  • Drug interactions matter more in older adults on multiple medicines
  • Dose may need adjustment for renal impairment

Use in pregnancy and breastfeeding

Not recommended:

  • Pregnancy: melatonin crosses the placenta; the risk to the unborn child isn't fully known
  • Breastfeeding: melatonin is excreted in breast milk; the risk to the breastfeeding child can't be excluded
  • If you become pregnant during Adaflex treatment, stop and contact your prescriber
  • Women of childbearing potential should use effective contraception during treatment
  • Adaflex isn't recommended for people planning pregnancy because of limited fertility data
Dr Ada Jex Cori holding a warning sign courierpharmacy.co.uk

Side effects

Adaflex is generally well-tolerated. So most people don't experience significant side effects. When they do happen, they're usually mild and self-limiting.

Common side effects

  • Headache
  • Drowsiness or sleepiness during the day

Less common side effects

  • Dizziness
  • Nausea or stomach upset
  • Vivid dreams or nightmares
  • Irritability or mood changes
  • Increased sweating
  • Skin rash
  • Hyperactivity or restlessness (especially in some children)

Uncommon serious side effects

  • High blood pressure (hypertension)
  • Liver function test abnormalities
  • Raised bilirubin

Rare but serious side effects

  • Severe allergic reactions (swelling of face, lips, tongue, throat; breathing difficulty) — medical emergency
  • Herpes zoster (shingles)
  • Low white blood cell count (leucopenia)
  • Low platelet count (thrombocytopenia)
  • Raised blood fats (hypertriglyceridaemia)
  • Increased seizure frequency in those with epilepsy
  • Significant mood changes including depression

Stop and seek urgent medical advice if

  • You develop signs of severe allergic reaction
  • New seizures occur or seizure frequency increases
  • Significant mood changes develop
  • Autoimmune disease symptoms worsen
  • Severe persistent headache or visual changes develop
  • Yellowing of skin or eyes (possible liver problem)

Yellow Card reporting

If you notice any side effects, please report them through the MHRA Yellow Card scheme at https://yellowcard.mhra.gov.uk/, or talk to our pharmacist.

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Drug interactions

Several medicines can interact with Adaflex. So our prescriber will review your medicines list before issuing a prescription.

Important interactions

Tell our prescriber if you take:

  • Fluvoxamine — strongly raises melatonin levels (combination usually avoided)
  • Citalopram or other SSRIs — possible interactions
  • Zolpidem and other sleeping pills — additive sedation
  • NSAIDs (aspirin, ibuprofen, naproxen) — avoid evening NSAID use as it may reduce melatonin's effect
  • Beta-blockers — administer in the morning rather than evening to avoid suppressing melatonin's effect
  • Calcium channel blockers (nifedipine, amlodipine) — melatonin may reduce their effectiveness
  • Warfarin and other anticoagulants — melatonin may potentiate effects
  • Carbamazepine (for epilepsy) — lowers melatonin levels
  • Rifampicin (for tuberculosis) — lowers melatonin levels
  • Oestrogens (in contraceptives or HRT) — may raise melatonin levels
  • Quinolone antibiotics (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin) — may raise melatonin levels
  • Cimetidine (for stomach ulcers) — may raise melatonin levels

Less significant considerations

Generally less concerning but worth flagging:

  • Caffeine — reduces melatonin effect; avoid in evening
  • Alcohol — disrupts sleep and reduces Adaflex's benefit
  • Nicotine — reduces melatonin levels
  • Psoralens (for psoriasis treatment) — may raise melatonin levels
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Frequently asked questions

Dr Ada Jex Cori at courierpharmacy.co.uk FAQs

Why does Adaflex matter when other melatonins exist?

Three key reasons:

  • First UK-licensed melatonin tablet specifically for paediatric ADHD-related sleep onset insomnia
  • Available in 1mg — the only UK melatonin tablet at this starting dose strength
  • Licensed for crushing and water dispersion, so suits children who can't swallow whole tablets

Before Adaflex, much paediatric melatonin was unlicensed or off-label. After all, having a UK-regulated, MHRA-licensed option for children matters for quality, safety, and prescriber confidence.

Can my child crush Adaflex tablets?

Yes — this is a licensed use:

  • Crush the tablet just before taking (don't crush in advance)
  • Mix with a small amount of water
  • Drink immediately
  • Alternatively, mix crushed tablet with a tiny amount of soft food (yoghurt, jam)
  • This often works for children with swallowing difficulties who would otherwise need liquid

How quickly does it work?

Adaflex builds up effect over days to weeks:

  • First doses: some sleep onset benefit possible within 30-60 minutes
  • Week 1: timing effect starts to establish
  • Weeks 2-4: full benefit becomes apparent
  • After 3 months: prescriber should review whether to continue

Why the 2-hour food restriction?

Food significantly affects absorption:

  • Food can almost double the absorption of melatonin
  • Inconsistent food intake leads to inconsistent effect
  • Carbohydrate-rich meals may impair blood glucose control
  • Stick to no food 2 hours before and 2 hours after the dose
  • This is one of the most often-missed practical points with melatonin

Is Adaflex better than the liquid form?

Usually yes, where the tablet form is suitable:

  • Adaflex is generally more cost-effective than liquid melatonin
  • Five different strengths allow precise dosing without measuring
  • No excipient concerns (no propylene glycol, sorbitol)
  • Can be crushed and dispersed in water for those who can't swallow tablets
  • Most UK NHS formularies prefer Adaflex as 1st line

In short, the liquid form is reserved for situations where Adaflex (even crushed) genuinely doesn't fit.

Will my child become dependent on Adaflex?

No. Specifically:

  • Tolerance hasn't been demonstrated with melatonin
  • Dependence hasn't been demonstrated either
  • This is one of the main reasons melatonin is preferred over benzodiazepines in children
  • Sleep difficulties may return after stopping — but this reflects the underlying issue, not withdrawal

Can adults use Adaflex for routine insomnia?

Usually not — it's only licensed for jet lag in adults. So:

  • For adults 55+ with primary insomnia, Circadin 2mg prolonged-release is the licensed option
  • For routine adult insomnia outside this age group, melatonin isn't first-line
  • Sleep hygiene and behavioural changes usually suit routine adult insomnia better
  • Adaflex's adult use is short-term jet lag, not chronic insomnia

How long should my child take Adaflex?

As long as it's helping and being prescribed:

  • Review at 3 months after starting
  • Regular review every 6 months while on treatment
  • Annual treatment break to assess ongoing need
  • Some children use it for years; others use it for shorter periods
  • Children may grow out of needing melatonin as they mature

Can I drink alcohol with Adaflex?

Avoid alcohol while taking Adaflex. So:

  • Alcohol disrupts the sleep cycle
  • Reduces melatonin's effect on sleep onset
  • Can worsen morning grogginess
  • This applies particularly to adolescents and adults using Adaflex

What if my child has a bad reaction?

Stop treatment and contact our prescriber or GP. Specifically:

  • Mild side effects (headache, drowsiness, nausea) often settle with continued use or dose reduction
  • Significant mood changes or behaviour issues warrant prescriber review
  • Allergic reactions need urgent medical attention
  • Seizure issues in epileptic children need immediate specialist input

Can I give Adaflex to my baby or toddler?

No — Adaflex isn't recommended for under-6s. So if your young child has sleep difficulties, see a health visitor or GP for assessment. Many baby and toddler sleep issues respond to behavioural approaches rather than medication. Where medication is genuinely needed in younger children, specialist paediatric sleep input is essential.

Is Adaflex safe long-term?

Available evidence supports reasonable long-term safety:

  • Clinical use of immediate-release melatonin in children has been ongoing for many years
  • Tolerance and dependence haven't been demonstrated
  • Limited data exists for use up to 3 years
  • Some open questions about effects on puberty in children
  • Regular review supports ongoing safety assessment
  • Annual treatment breaks help clarify ongoing need

How should I store it?

Storage:

  • Room temperature as labelled
  • Keep in original blister pack to protect tablets
  • Keep out of sight and reach of children
  • Don't share between household members
  • Don't use after expiry date

How do I order from Courier Pharmacy?

Add Adaflex 2mg tablets to your basket on courierpharmacy.co.uk and complete the online consultation. For paediatric use, our prescriber will need evidence of specialist initiation. Your order goes out in plain, unbranded packaging.

More than a prescription: our community

Healthcare shouldn't only happen when you're paying for it.

Every fortnight we run free drop-in talks and clinics at Insomnia, Derby, from 10am to 12pm. So we show up, even when it's free.

Bring a question, bring a friend, bring a stack of bewildering letters from another clinic. We'll sit with you.

We cover sleep difficulties, ADHD, autism support, MCAS, CFS, fibromyalgia, dermatology, eczema, allergies, asthma, hair loss, men's and women's health, digestive health, weight management, and whatever else people bring through the door. No appointment. No cost. No pressure. Just real support and treatment that fits.

This article is for information only and isn't a substitute for personal medical advice. Always speak to a qualified prescriber before starting or changing treatment. Paediatric melatonin use typically requires specialist initiation by a paediatrician, CAMHS, or sleep specialist before ongoing supply from online services.

How this content was created

Written by the Courier Pharmacy editorial team and reviewed by a GPhC-registered pharmacist.

The content is grounded in the EMC Summary of Product Characteristics for Adaflex 2mg, the BNF for Children (BNFc), NICE Clinical Knowledge Summary on ADHD management, NHS guidance, and various UK NHS shared care protocols for paediatric melatonin use. In addition, it draws on the real questions families bring to our drop-in clinics in Derby.

References

[1] Electronic Medicines Compendium (emc) (2024) Adaflex 2 mg tablet — Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC). Available at: https://www.medicines.org.uk/emc/product/13629/smpc

[2] BNF for Children (2024) Melatonin. Available at: https://bnfc.nice.org.uk/drugs/melatonin/

[3] National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (2024) Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: management — Clinical Knowledge Summary. Available at: https://cks.nice.org.uk/topics/attention-deficit-hyperactivity-disorder/

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Download patient leaflet

https://www.medicines.org.uk/emc/files/pil.13629.pdf

Adaflex 2mg tablets v2 courierpharmacy.co.uk
Adaflex 2mg tablets
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