| Literature DB >> 22163246 |
I A Lockhart1, M E Orme, S A Mitchell.
Abstract
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) in Alzheimer's disease (AD) greatly increase caregiver burden. The abilities of donepezil and memantine to manage BPSD within their licensed indications in AD were compared.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer disease; Behavioural medicine; Behavioural/psychiatric symptoms of dementia; Community Mental Health Services; Geriatric psychiatry; Home nursing; Meta-analysis; Preventive psychiatry; Systematic reviews
Year: 2011 PMID: 22163246 PMCID: PMC3199891 DOI: 10.1159/000330032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dement Geriatr Cogn Dis Extra ISSN: 1664-5464
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Criteria | Included | Excluded |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Age: ≥18 years Race: any Qualifying disease: AD (diagnosed with established criteria, e.g. DSM-IV and NINCDS-ADRDA) Any severity of disease at baseline Community-/nursing home-dwelling resident | Age: ≤18 years |
| Perspective of the study | Prospective (concurrent) Comparative | Retrospective (non-concurrent, historical) |
| Type of the study | RCT (open label or blinded) | Non-randomised CCT: Cohort Observational |
| Cross-over trials with a wash-out period between treatments | Case control Cross sectional Non-comparative study | |
| Language | All | None |
| Study duration | Any | None |
| Sample size | Any | None |
| Interventions/treatments | Any dose of:
Donepezil (Aricept®) Memantine (Ebixa®) | |
| Control intervention/treatments | Placebo/usual care Any of the above interventions | |
| Included study outcomes | Global or individual BPSD using a validated assessment instrument, i.e.
NPI NPI-NH CMAI Apathy Scale BEHAVE-AD CERAD Behavioural Scale CSDD | Efficacy only Safety/tolerability |
DSM-IV = Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; NINCDS-ADRDA = National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke and the Alzheimer Disease and Related Disorders Association; CCT = controlled clinical trial; NPI-NH = NPI-Nursing Home Version; CMAI = Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory; BEHAVE-AD = Behavioural Pathologic Rating Scale for Alzheimer's Disease; CERAD = Consortium to Establish a Registry in AD; CSDD = Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia.
Fig. 1Flow chart of inclusions/exclusions.
Main study characteristics for published RCTs examining donepezil
| First author | Participants/severity of disease | Setting | Mean age years [range] | Female % | Mean NPI score at baseline (SD) | Mean MMSE score at baseline (SD) [range] | n | Treatment/dose | Concomitant medication | Duration of study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AD2000 Courtney [34] (2004) | Mild (MMSE 19–26):
Donepezil, 51% Placebo, 52% | Community | 76 [54–93] | 58 | 15 (0–84) | 19 [10–27] | 283 | Donepezil, 5–10 mg | NR, although no patient had previously received donepezil or other cholinergic-enhancing agents | ≤166 weeks |
| (full paper, UK) | Moderate (MMSE 10–18): Donepezil, 49% Placebo, 48% | 75 [46–90] | 60 | 15 (0–74) | 19 [10–26] | 283 | Placebo | |||
| Holmes [45] (2004) | Mild-moderate AD (MMSE 10–26) | Not stated; assumed to be not in nursing home as patients had mild-moderate AD | 78.6 (SEM 1.4) | 54 | 14.3 (SEM 1.4) | 21.1 (SEM 0.9) | 41 | Donepezil, 10 mg | Allowed: psychotropic medication use, 39% | 12 weeks |
| (full paper, UK) | 78.8 (SEM 1.2) | 67 | 15.1 (SEM 1.8) | 20.8 (SEM 0.6) | 55 | Placebo | Allowed: psychotropic medication use, 47% | |||
| lohannsen [ | Patients had mild-moderate AD | At home or in an assisted home care facility at study entry | 74.1 (SD 7.6) | 59.6 | NR | 18.8 (4.8) | 99 | Donepezil (5 mg/day for 4 weeks, then 10 mg/day) | Antidepressants: 16.2% Antipsychotics: 10.1% Psychotropics: 35.4% | 12–24 weeks open-label phase 12 weeks double-blind phase and 12 weeks single-blind phase |
| (full paper, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, The Netherlands, Poland, USA) | 71.4 (SD 9.3) | 63.1 | NR | 18.5 (4.8) | 103 | Donepezil (4-week open-label phase) Placebo (10 mg/day double-blind phase) Donepezil challenge in single-blind phase (dose as donepezil arm) | Antidepressants: 26.2% Antipsychotics: 10.1% Psychotropics: 38.8% | |||
| Winblad [37] (2001) | Patients with mild-moderate AD (MMSE score ≥ 10 and ≤26) | Out-patients | 72.1 (SD 8.6) | 69.7 | 13.05 (13.76) | 19.37 (4.37) | 142 | Donepezil | 91% [psychotropic medication, 32.4%] | 1 year |
| (full paper, Denmark, Norway, Finland, Sweden, The Netherlands) | 72.9 (SD 8.0) | 59.0 | 11.78 (12.33) | 19.26 (4.54) | 144 | Placebo | 92% [psychotropic medication, 27.8%] | |||
| Gauthier [29] (2002) | A subgroup of Feldman [32] (2001) | Residing in the community or assisted living setting | 74.3 | 68.6 | 17.87 (SEM: 1.69) | 13.57 (SEM: 0.07) | 102 | Donepezil (5 mg/day for 28 days, then 10 mg/day to improve efficacy) | Most concomitant medications were permitted with the exception of those with notable cholinomimetic or anticholinergic effects and investigational drugs | |
| (full paper, Canada, Australia, France) | Patients had moderate AD standardised MMSE score of 13.7 (mean) at baseline | 74.3 | 57.1 | 16.74 (SEM: 1.6) | 13.86 (SEM: 0.26) | 105 | Placebo (5 mg/day for 28 days, then 10 mg/day to improve efficacy) | 24 weeks | ||
Feldman [32] (2001) Gauthier [28] | Patients had moderate-severe AD (MMSE score of 5–17 at baseline) | Residing in the community or assisted living | 73.3 | 61.1 | 19.55 (SEM: 1.48) | 11.72 (0.35) | 144 | Donepezil (5 mg/day for 28 days, then 10 mg/day to improve efficacy) | 97% (psychoactive drugs: 33% prior to study, 45% during study) | 24 weeks |
| (full papers, Canada, Australia, France) | 74 | 61 | 19.3 (SEM: 1.45) | 11.97 (0.34) | 146 | Placebo (5 mg/day for 28 days, then 10 mg/day to improve efficacy) | 95% (psychoactive drugs: 24% prior to study, 36% during study) | |||
| Black [46] (2007) | Patients with severe AD | At home or in an assisted home care facility at study entry; nursing home patients were not enrolled | 78 (SD 8.04) | 72.2 | 22.7 (SEM: 1.6) | 7.5 (3.25) | 176 | Donepezil (week 1–6:5 mg/day + placebo tablet; week 7–24: 5 mg b.i.d.) | 90.3% (SSRI: 10.8% baseline to 14.8% during study) | 24 weeks |
| (full paper, USA, Canada, France, UK, Australia) | 78 (SD 8.2) | 67.7 | 22.2 (SEM: 1.55) | 7.4 (3.57) | 167 | Placebo (2 tablets/day) | 94% (SSRI: 16.2% baseline to 19.2% during study) | |||
| Homma [35] (2008) | Patients with severe AD (MMSE 1–12) | Residential or assisted living facility | 78.0 (SD 8.9) | 79.2 | NR | 7.9 (3.3) | 101 | Donepezil 5 mg | 93.8% | |
| (full paper, Japan) | 76.9 (SD 7.9) | 79.3 | NR | 7.4 (3.4) | 96 | Donepezil 10 mg | 93.5% | 24 weeks | ||
| 79.7 (SD 7.5) | 82.4 | NR | 8.0 (3.3) | 105 | Placebo | 91.2% | ||||
| Howard [43] (2007) | Most of the patients had severe dementia | Residential care facility or living with a caregiver in the community | 84.9 (SD 7.3) | 82 | 23.7 (15.9) | 8.1 (5.9) | 128 | Donepezil (week 1–4: 5 mg/day; week 5–12: 5 mg/b.i.d.) | 25.8% at trial entry | 12 weeks |
| (full paper, UK) | 84.4 (SD 8.2) | 87 | 23.6 (16.7) | 8.2 (6.8) | 131 | Placebo (week 1–4: 1 capsule/day; week 5–12: 2 capsules/day) | 13.8% at trial entry | |||
Winblad [33] (2006) Jelic [31] (2008) | Patients with severe AD | Nursing home with trained staff | 84.5 (SD 6.0) | 79 | 19.0 (15.2) | 6.0 (3.0) | 128 | Donepezil (mean daily dose 8.2 mg (SD1.5) | 100% | 6 months |
| (full paper, Sweden) | 85.3 (SD 5.9) | 74 | 19.6 (15.8) | 6.2 (3.0) | 120 | Placebo (mean daily dose 8.4 mg, SD 1.2) | 99% | |||
Tariot [41] (2001) (full paper, USA) | Donepezil:
Mild, 12% Moderate, 62% Severe, 26% | Nursing home | 85.4 | 83 | 21 (14.5) | 14.4 (5.4) | 103 | Donepezil (week 1–4: 5 mg/day + placebo tablet; week 5–24: 5 mg/b.i.d.) | 100% (psychoactive drugs: 59%) | 24 weeks |
| Placebo:
Mild, 17% Moderate, 60% Severe, 22% | 85.9 | 82 | 20.5 (14.7) | 14.4 (5.8) | 105 | Placebo (2 tablets/day) | 100% (psychoactive drugs: 62%) | |||
NR = Not reported; SSRI = selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
Inclusion criteria included MMSE score 1–10 and a Functional Assessment Staging rating of stage 5 (requires assistance in choosing proper clothing) to 7c (non-ambulatory/unable to walk without assistance).
Most commonly used classes of drugs were analgesics, laxatives, hypnotics, sedatives and anxiolytics, diuretics, drugs used to treat anaemia, antidepressants, drugs to treat rheumatic diseases and gout, antibacterial agents, and antipsychotic drugs. More than 80% of patients were taking psychoactive medications [breakdown by class as follows: hypnotics, sedatives, and anxiolytics, 61% (donepezil, n = 78) vs. 58% (placebo, n = 70); antidepressants, 52% (n = 67) vs. 51% (n = 61); antipsychotics, 38% (n = 48) vs. 42% (n = 50), respectively].
5 mg for the first 30 days followed by 10 mg thereafter (or 5 mg if not well tolerated).
p = 0.02 between groups.
The majority of patients had an MMSE score of 6–12 (68.8% in the donepezil group and 68.3% in the placebo group).
Clinician was permitted to reduce the study medication to 1 blinded tablet per day if necessary after week 6. The maximum dose of 10 mg/day was maintained by 85% of patients in the donepezil group at study endpoint.
More than 20% of patients in either group were taking antiplatelet agents. The most common concomitant medications taken during the study (10% in either group) included acetylsalicylic acid, multivitamins, tocopherol, risperidone, para cetamol, furosemide, levothyroxine sodium and ascorbic acid.
Percentage taking at least one concomitant medication over the course of the study. Antihypertensive drugs were used more frequently in the placebo (24/144) than in the donepezil (14/142) group.
Gauthier et al. [28] reported more elaborate results of NPI efficacy outcomes of the same patient population studied by Feldman et al. [32].
10 mg/day the intended dose: study medication could be reduced to 5 mg/day or placebo equivalent at any time during the study to improve tolerability.
One patient with a baseline standardised MMSE score of 18 was randomised into the trial.
Patients receiving psychotropic medications were generally required to have been on stable doses for at least 1 month before screening. Adjustments in psychotropic medication use were discouraged, but were permitted if clinically necessary. Most concomitant medications were allowed, except those with significant cholinomimetic or anticholinergic effects and investigational drugs; patients treated with tacrine must have discontinued use of the agent at least 30 days before the screening visit.
Stable doses of antidepressants (SSRIs) and low stable doses of atypical antipsychotics that were prescribed before study entry were allowed to be continued during the study.
MMSE 21–26 at baseline.
Placebo vs. donepezil 5 mg vs. donepezil 10 mg: psychotropics, 29.4 vs. 27.1 vs. 23.9%; cerebral circulation/metabolism enhancers, 9.8 vs. 9.4 vs. 9.8%; hypnotics, 20.6 vs. 11.5 vs. 18.5%; other, 37.3 vs. 32.3 vs. 41.3%.
Open-label phase: 5 mg/day donepezil for 6 weeks followed by 10 mg/day for further 6 weeks. Patients were then randomised to 10 mg/day donepezil for further 6 weeks after a 12-week open-label phase. If there was no marked cognitive decline (loss of >2 points on the MMSE compared with baseline) then randomised treatment continued for further 6 weeks.
Treatment originally scheduled for 60 weeks (12-week run-in + 48-week maintenance treatment). However, following a protocol modification, there was an option to extend treatment indefinitely. [After a 6-week no-treatment washout, patients could continue with the same double-blind treatment that they had been receiving for 60 weeks for a further 48 weeks if they, their doctor and their carer judged that this course was appropriate. At the end of every 48-week treatment period, a further 4-week treatment-free washout took place, whereupon patients could once again continue with another 48-week phase of double-blind treatment.]
Run-in treatment period of 12 weeks, in which patients were randomly allocated either to donepezil (5 mg/day) or placebo followed by a second randomisation to long-term donepezil (5 or 10 mg/day) or placebo.
Main study characteristics for published RCTs examining memantine monotherapy
| First author | MMSE score | Setting | Mean age years (SD) | Female % | Mean NPI score at baseline (SD) | Mean MMSE score at baseline (SD) | n | Treatment/dose | Concomitant medication | Study duration weeks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bakchine [38] (2008) | 11–23 at baseline | Outpatient | 74.0 (7.4) | 65 | NA | 18.6 (3.3) | 318 | Memantine (initial dose: 5 mg/day then: 4 × 5 mg/day) | Allowed | 24 |
| (full paper, 12 European countries) | 73.3 (6.9) | 60 | NA | 18.9 (3.2) | 152 | Placebo (initial dose: 5 mg/day then: 4 × 5 mg/day) | ||||
| Peskind [39] (2006) | 10–22 at screening/baseline | Outpatient | 78.0 (7.3) | 60 | 11.5 (13.2) | 17.4 (3.7) | 201 | Memantine (initial dose: 5 mg/day then: 4 × 5 mg/day) | NR | 24g |
| (full paper, USA) | 77.0 (8.2) | 57 | 12.2 (13) | 17.2 (3.4) | 202 | Placebo (initial dose: 5 mg/day then: 4 × 5 mg/day) | NR | |||
| Reisberg [40] (2003) | 3–14 | Resident in the community | 75.5 (8.16) | 72.2 | 21.4 | 7.8 (3.76) | 126 | Memantine (20 mg) | Exclusions listed | 28 mean for both groups 24 (SD ± 8) |
| (full paper, USA) | 75.8 (7.28) | 65.5 | 19.5 | 8.1 (3.60) | 126 | Placebo (20 mg) | ||||
| van Dyck [44] (2007) | 5–14 at screening/baseline | Own or relative's home | 78.1 (8.2) | 72.5 | 20.3 (15.7) | 10.0 (2.8) | 178 | Memantine (initial dose: 5 mg/day then: 4 × 5 mg/day) | 97.2% | 24 |
| (full paper, USA) | 78.3 (7.6) | 70.3 | 17.5 (16.4) | 10.3 (3.1) | 172 | Placebo (initial dose: 5 mg/day then: 4 × 5 mg/day) | 97.1% | |||
The most common concomitant medications included acetylsalicylic acid, tocopherol, multivitamins and acetaminophen.
Patients receiving the following concomitant medications were excluded: anticonvulsant agents, antiparkinsonian agents, hypnotic agents, anxiolytic agents, neuroleptic agents, cholinomimetic agents or any other investigational compounds.
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, oestrogens, anti-inflammatory drugs, β-blockers, insulin and H2 blockers were allowed if dose and medication had been stable for at least 3 months and were kept stable during study; only non-opioid analgesics could be administered chronically; vitamin E, coenzyme Q and atypical antipsychotics were allowed if dose and medication had been stable for at least 30 days and kept stable during study; atypical antipsychotics were not to be taken 3 days before a visit.
Stage 5 or 6 on the Global Deterioration Scale, and stage ≥6a on the Functional Assessment Staging instrument.
Detailed patient information reported from only those completing the study: n = 97.
Dose adjustments were permitted between weeks 3 and 8 for participants experiencing adverse events; however, participants unable to tolerate 20 mg/day by the end of week 8 were excluded from the study.
A 1- to 2-week single-blind placebo run-in phase was completed before randomisation to assess compliance and to minimise treatment response at baseline.
Transient dose adjustments were permitted between weeks 3 and 8 for participants experiencing dose-limiting adverse events; however, all were required to receive the target dose of 20 mg/day by the end of week 8.
The patients were randomised in a 2:1 ratio, to minimise patient exposure to placebo due to ethical considerations (availability of efficient symptomatic drugs for AD in the majority of countries).
Main study characteristics for published RCTs examining memantine as add-on therapy to stable donepezil/ChEI
| First author | Participants/severity of disease | Setting | Age years (SD) | Female % | NPI score at baseline (SD) | MMSE score at baseline (SD) | n | Treatment/dose | Concomitant medication | Study duration weeks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Porsteinsson [36] (2008) | Patients had mild-moderate ADi | Resident in the community | 74.9 (7.64) | 53.9 | 11.8 (13.11) | 16.7 (3.67) | 217 | Memantine (initial dose: 5 mg/day; then: 4 × 5 mg/day) | Donepezil (n = 154, 71.0%) 9.5 ± 1.5 mg/day Rivastigmine (n = 33, 15.2%) 9.2 ± 2.8 mg/day; Galantamine (n = 30, 13.8%) | 24 |
| (full paper, USA) | 76 (8.43) | 50.5 | 12.3 (13.28) | 17.0 (3.64) | 216 | Placebo (initial dose: 5 mg/day; then: 4 × 5 mg/day) | Donepezil (n = 137, 63.4%) 8.9 ± 2.1 mg/day Rivastigmine (n = 44, 20.4%) 10 ± 2.6 mg/day Galantamine (n = 35, 16.2%) | |||
Tariot [27] (2004) Cummings [26] (2006) van Dyck [25] (2006) | Patients had moderate-severe AD | Resident in the community | 75.5 (8.45) | 63 | 13.4 (SEM: 1.07) | 9.9 (3.13) | 203 | Memantine (week 1–4: 5 mg/day; week 5–24: 4 × 5 mg/day) | 97.5% | 24 |
| (full paper, USA) | 75.5 (8.73) | 67 | 13.4 (SEM: 1.08) | 10.2 (2.98) | 201 | Placebo (week 1–4: 5 mg/day; week 5–24: 4 × 5 mg/day) | 98% | |||
Dose adjustments were permitted between weeks 3–8 for participants experiencing adverse effects.
All patients were to maintain stable donepezil therapy at entry dose as prescribed by the patient's physician for the duration of the study.
The most frequent medication classes (>20%) used during treatment with memantine were vitamins (77%), analgesics (48%), antidepressants (36%), mineral supplements (27%), lipid-reducing agents (25%), anxiolytics/neuroleptics (22%), and anti-inflammatory agents (24%).
Cummings et al. [26] reported more in-depth results of NPI efficacy outcomes of the same patient population studied by Tariot et al. [27].
Fig. 2Funnel plot of mean difference (MD) in NPI score (LOCF) plotted against standard error.
Fig. 3Forest plot of random-effect meta-analysis for studies reporting use in licensed indication: donepezil, mild to moderately severe AD population, and memantine monotherapy, moderate to severe AD population. Note: ChEIs are also used in the placebo control arm; I2 = Variation in effect attributable to heterogeneity.