| April
13, 2005
Progression From Mild Cognitive Impairment To Alzheimer’s
May Be Delayed By Drug, According To National Study
By Sue Pondrom
In a study of
people with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), those who took
the drug donepezil were at reduced risk of progressing to a
diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) during the first year
of the trial, but by the end of the 3-year study there was no
benefit from the drug. Vitamin E was also tested in the study
and was found to have no effect at any time point in the study
when compared with placebo.
These findings, from
the Memory Impairment Study, are the first to suggest than any
agent can delay the clinical diagnosis of AD in people with
MCI. The effects of the drug measured in this study “did
not provide support for a clear recommendation for the use of
donepezil” generally to forestall the diagnosis of AD
in people with MCI, the researchers stated in their report,
but they did note the potential importance of the findings for
some patients. The data, they said, “could prompt a discussion”
between clinicians and patients on the possibility of donepezil
therapy in certain cases.
The findings were
reported in the April 14, 2005, online The New England Journal
of Medicine by principal investigators Ronald Petersen,
Ph.D., M.D., of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, Leon Thal, M.D.,
of the University of California, San Diego, and colleagues.
The research was funded in part by the National Institute on
Aging (NIA) and was conducted as part of the Alzheimer's Disease
Cooperative Study (ADCS), a nationwide clinical trials consortium
supported by the NIA, a component of the National Institutes
of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Thal, who is director
of the ADCS and chair of the UCSD Department of Neurosciences,
said “these findings represent the first time that any
intervention has had an effect in slowing progression for subjects
with mild cognitive impairment.”
“While the delay
in progressing to Alzheimer's disease had a limited effect in
this case, it comes at an early stage of memory loss, a critically
important time for patients and families hoping that the disease
can be held at bay,” says Neil Buckholtz, Ph.D., chief
of the Dementias of Aging Branch at the NIA.
As part of the study,
the researchers examined the effect of donepezil and vitamin
E on delaying diagnosis of AD among a subset of people with
MCI with apolipoprotein E-4 (APOE-e4), the only known genetic
risk factor for late-onset AD. While the overall rate of progression
to AD was greater in this group, use of donepezil in the APOE-e4
subset was beneficial for up to 36 months in reducing the risk
of an AD diagnosis. The researchers did not recommend APOE-e4
genotyping for people with MCI, suggesting more research would
be needed to understand the mechanism of action of the drug
and other factors.
Additional important
factors in the study were the success in diagnosing MCI on a
reliable basis in a multi-site study and the finding that MCI
can be predictive of AD. A condition whose characterization
in the medical community is relatively new, MCI is a transitional
state that occurs between the cognitive changes of normal aging
and the very early stage of AD. The amnestic subtype of MCI,
the focus of this research, involves memory problems not severe
enough to be classified as dementia. Previous studies have shown
that approximately eight in 10 people who meet criteria for
amnestic MCI progress to AD within 6 years of diagnosis and
that people with the APOE-e4 gene progress to AD more rapidly.
In this trial, donepezil
and the antioxidant vitamin E were each compared to placebo
to learn whether either treatment might delay or prevent progression
to AD among people with MCI. Participants were randomized to
three groups, one taking 2000 International Units daily of vitamin
E, the second receiving 10 mg of donepezil daily, and the third
on placebo. All participants also took daily multivitamins.
The average age of the participants at baseline was 73 years.
Among the 769 study
participants enrolled at 69 sites in the U.S. and Canada, 212
developed possible or probable AD within the 3-year study period.
The overall rate of progression from MCI to AD for all three
treatment groups combined was 16 percent per year. The study
found that the group on donepezil's risk of progression to a
diagnosis of AD was reduced by 58 percent one year into the
study, 36 percent at 2 years, but there was no risk reduction
at the end of the full 3 years of the study.
“These findings
give me a great deal of hope,” says Petersen. “We
have not answered the question of whether donepezil reduces
the underlying brain changes in Alzheimer's disease, but now
we know that for some people, drug therapy did make a real,
clinical difference. I think there will be real opportunities
in the future to test other therapies for patients with MCI.”
Donepezil, a cholinesterase
inhibitor, is currently prescribed for mild to moderate stages
of AD to improve memory and other cognitive functions. Cholinesterase
inhibitors work by delaying the breakdown of the neurotransmitter
acetylcholine in the brain. Acetylcholine helps communication
between the nerve cells and is important for memory.
The trial received
primary support from the NIA, with additional funding provided
by Pfizer, Inc., and Eisai, Inc. Pfizer and Eisai also contributed
the donepezil study medication, and vitamin E was provided by
DSM Nutritional Products, Inc.
The report will appear
in the June 9, 2005, print version of The New England Journal
of Medicine.
News
Media Contact: Sue Pondrom (619) 543-6163
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