Erkinjuntti T, Gauthier S, Bullock R, Kurz A, Hammond G, Schwalen S, Zhu Y, Brashear R
Memory Research Unit, Department of Neurology, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland.
J Psychopharmacol. 2008 Sep;22(7):761-8. doi: 10.1177/0269881107083028. Epub 2008 Feb 28.
Alzheimer's disease combined with cerebrovascular disease (AD with CVD) is associated with progressive decline, with CVD impacting AD onset and severity of progression. Subjects with confirmed diagnosis of AD with CVD were treated with galantamine during a six-month, randomized, placebo-controlled trial (N = 285). Responder analyses were performed for cognitive, behavioural and functional outcome measures. Galantamine treatment resulted in significantly greater cognitive and functional improvements compared with placebo at six months, and a significantly higher percentage of treatment responders. The proportion of responders demonstrating improved or maintained cognition on the 11-item AD assessment scale-cognitive subscale (ADAS-cog/11) was 60.5% for galantamine versus 46.0% for placebo (P = 0.013). The proportion of patients responding by at least four-points on the ADAS-cog/11 was significantly greater for the galantamine group compared with placebo (33.6% versus 17.2%; P = 0.003). Seventy-five percent of galantamine-treated subjects improved or remained stable as assessed by CIBIC-plus compared with 53.6% on placebo (P = 0.0006). Significantly higher responder rates were observed with galantamine for behaviour (64.9% versus 56.6%; P = 0.024), and numerically favourable responder rates were seen with galantamine for activities of daily living. Treatment-emergent adverse events were generally related with the gastrointestinal system (nausea 20% versus 10%; vomiting 12% versus 5%; galantamine and placebo groups, respectively). Three deaths occurred during double-blind treatment: 2 of 188 subjects receiving galantamine, and 1 of 97 subjects receiving placebo. These findings are consistent with a broad range of cognitive, functional and behavioural benefits with galantamine across the spectrum of AD and AD with CVD.
阿尔茨海默病合并脑血管病(AD合并CVD)与病情进行性恶化相关,其中CVD会影响AD的发病及病情进展的严重程度。在一项为期6个月的随机、安慰剂对照试验(N = 285)中,对确诊为AD合并CVD的受试者使用加兰他敏进行治疗。针对认知、行为和功能结局指标进行了反应者分析。与安慰剂相比,加兰他敏治疗在6个月时带来了显著更大的认知和功能改善,且治疗反应者的比例显著更高。在11项阿尔茨海默病评估量表认知子量表(ADAS-cog/11)上,加兰他敏组认知改善或维持的反应者比例为60.5%,而安慰剂组为46.0%(P = 0.013)。与安慰剂相比,加兰他敏组在ADAS-cog/11上至少提高4分的患者比例显著更高(33.6%对17.2%;P = 0.003)。根据CIBIC-plus评估,75%接受加兰他敏治疗的受试者病情改善或保持稳定,而安慰剂组为53.6%(P = 0.0006)。加兰他敏在行为方面的反应率显著更高(64.9%对56.6%;P = 0.024),在日常生活活动方面,加兰他敏的反应率在数值上更有利。治疗中出现的不良事件一般与胃肠道系统有关(恶心,加兰他敏组20%,安慰剂组10%;呕吐,加兰他敏组12%,安慰剂组5%)。双盲治疗期间发生了3例死亡:接受加兰他敏治疗的188名受试者中有2例,接受安慰剂治疗的97名受试者中有1例。这些发现与加兰他敏在整个AD及AD合并CVD范围内带来广泛的认知、功能和行为益处相一致。