| July
18, 2004
Donepezil May Have Short-Term
Benefit For Mild Cognitive Impairment
By Sue Pondrom
People with mild
cognitive impairment (MCI) taking the drug donepezil were at
reduced risk of progressing to Alzheimer's disease (AD) for
the first 18 months of a 3-year study when compared with their
counterparts on placebo, according to a presentation of preliminary
data from a recently completed clinical trial held under the
auspices of the national Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative
Study, which is directed by the University of California, San
Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine.
Supported by the National
Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the National Institutes of
Health, the study showed that the reduced risk of progressing
from MCI to a diagnosis of AD among participants on donepezil
disappeared after 18 months, and by the end of the study, the
probability of progressing to AD was the same in the two groups.
Presented at the Alzheimer
Association’s 9th International Conference on Research
on Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders (ICAD) in
Philadelphia on July 18, 2004, the study compared donepezil,
vitamin E, or placebo in participants with MCI to see whether
the drugs might delay or prevent progression to AD. Over the
course of the study, among people who did progress to AD, the
MCI participants on donepezil averaged 661 days until a diagnosis
of AD, a second group on vitamin E averaged 540 days from MCI
to AD, and those on placebo averaged 484 days to AD. The study
investigators reported a statistically significant effect when
donepezil was compared to placebo, but said there was no apparent
benefit from vitamin E.
The study’s principal
investigator was Ronald Petersen, M.D., Ph.D., of the Mayo Clinic,
Rochester MN; Leon Thal, M.D., UCSD professor of neusciences,
heads the nationwide Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study.
The NIA and the scientists
conducting the study emphasized that further analyses will be
needed to assess the practical, clinical implications of the
new data; the study is very complex, and the effects appear
time limited.
"We will subject
the data to considerable scrutiny over the next few months for
additional information on whether and, if so, when the drug
could benefit people with MCI." said Neil Buckholtz, Ph.D.,
Chief of the NIA’s Dementias of Aging Branch. "Today's
presentation of a possible but limited effect of donepezil is
encouraging. But we are hoping that further clinical studies
in MCI patients will result in more significant progress in
delaying a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease."
Besides primary support
from the NIA, additional funding for the study was provided
by Pfizer, Inc., and Eisai Inc. Pfizer and Eisai additionally
contributed the donepezil study medication, and vitamin E was
given by DSM Nutritional Products, Inc.
People with this form
of MCI have notable memory loss and are at higher risk of developing
AD than those of similar age and health in the general population.
During the study, patients with MCI were given donepezil, vitamin
E, or a placebo. Donepezil was selected because of its current
approval as a drug for treating patients already diagnosed with
AD. The antioxidant vitamin E has been linked in animal research
to a reduction in cognitive decline and in some population studies
to reduced risk of AD.
In addition to being
tested for AD, the participants were assessed in specific areas
of cognitive function, including orientation, language, and
attention, and in everyday function, such as activities of daily
living. These secondary analyses suggest that decline among
the group on donepezil occurred at a slower rate on tests of
global cognition, memory, and language than the other participants
during the first half of the study but progressed at the same
rate thereafter.
“Certainly, we
need to continue our analyses,” said the study’s
principal investigator Petersen. “But these are the first
reported data to show some kind of positive treatment effect
on progression from MCI to AD, suggesting that it may be possible
to design better trials to intervene at an earlier stage in
the disease process and slow the progression to AD.”
The Memory Impairment
Study was conducted nationwide at 69 sites. It involved 769
participants with MCI, who were followed for 3 years and tested
for AD at 6-month intervals during their 36 months in the study.
The average age of the participants was 73.
Media Contacts: Sue Pondrom
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