| Literature DB >> 26267422 |
Robert Hoerr1, Michael Zaudig2.
Abstract
When the early trials of Ginkgo biloba extract EGb 761(®) were conducted, different terms were used to denote ageing-associated neurocognitive disorders. With the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), a taxonomy covering dementia and pre-dementia stages of such disorders became available. DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for neurocognitive disorders (NCDs) were applied to patients with any type of ageing-associated cognitive impairment, including dementia, enrolled in randomized controlled clinical trials of EGb 761(®), taking into account the reported inclusion and exclusion criteria and patient characteristics at baseline. For 23 of 31 trials (74 %), the inclusion diagnoses could be classified as NCD in accordance with DSM-5. Thirteen trials enrolled patients with major NCD, four trials enrolled patients with mild NCD and six trials enrolled patients with NCD, who could not be classified unambiguously as having mild or major NCD. Although various terms were formerly used for neurocognitive disorders, the patients enrolled in the majority of clinical trials with EGb 761(®) could be classified retrospectively using modern DSM-5 diagnostic criteria.Entities:
Keywords: DSM-5; Dementia; Diagnosis; EGb 761®; Ginkgo biloba; Mild cognitive impairment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26267422 PMCID: PMC4819753 DOI: 10.1007/s00406-015-0632-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci ISSN: 0940-1334 Impact factor: 5.270
Comparison of diagnostic criteria for major neurocognitive disorder or dementia across classification systems
| DSM-5 | DSM-IV | DSM-III-R | DSM-III | ICD-10 | NINCDS-ADRDA | NINDS-AIREN |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Major NCD | Dementia | Dementia | Dementia | Dementia | Dementia | Dementia |
| A. Evidence of significant cognitive decline from a previous level of performance … | A. Development of … B. … represent a significant decline from a previous level of functioning |
| A. Loss of intellectual abilities … | G1. Evidence of … (G1.1) Decline in … (G1.2) Decline in … deterioration from previously higher level of performance should be established | Dementia … Progressive worsening of … | 1. Dementia defined by cognitive decline from a previously higher level of functioning and manifested by … |
| A. … in one or more cognitive domains … based on: | A. … multiple cognitive deficits manifested by |
|
| G1. … each of the following: | Deficits in two or more areas of cognition |
|
| A1. Concern of the individual, a knowledgeable informant or the clinician | ||||||
| A1. Memory impairment | A. Demonstrable evidence of impairment in short- and long-term memory | B. Memory impairment | (G1.1) … memory | … memory … | … impairment of memory … | |
| A2. Substantial impairment in cognitive performance, documented by standardized neuropsychological testing or another quantified clinical assessment | A2. one or more of the following disturbances: (a) aphasia, (b) apraxia, (c) agnosia, (d) disturbance in executive functioning | B. At least one of the following: (1) impairment in abstract thinking, (2) impaired judgment, (3) other disturbances of higher cortical function, such as aphasia, apraxia, agnosia, constructional difficulty … | C. At least one of the following: (1) impairment of abstract thinking, (2) impaired judgment, (3) other disturbances of higher cortical function, such as aphasia, apraxia, agnosia, constructional difficulty … | (G1.2) … other cognitive abilities characterized by deterioration in judgement and thinking, such as planning and organizing, and in the general processing of information; … objectively verified by obtaining a reliable history, supplemented, if possible, by neuropsychological testing or quantified cognitive assessments | … and other cognitive functions … established by clinical examination and documented by MMSE, Blessed Dementia Scale or similar examination and confirmed by neuropsychological tests | … and of two or more cognitive domains (orientation, attention, language, visuospatial functions, executive functions, motor control, praxis), preferably established by clinical examination and documented by neuropsychological testing |
| B. … (4) personality change | C. … (4) personality change | G3. Decline in emotional control or motivation, change in social behaviour, manifest as at least one of the following: (1) emotional lability, (2) irritability, (3) apathy, (4) coarsening of social behaviour | ||||
| B. Cognitive deficits interfere with independence in everyday activities | B. Cognitive deficits in A1 and A2 each cause significant impairment in social or occupational functioning and … | C. Disturbance in A and B significantly interferes with work or usual social activities or relationships with others | A. … of sufficient severity to interfere with social or occupational functioning | Mild: … interfere with everyday activities; Moderate: … serious handicap to independent living; |
| Deficits should be severe enough to interfere with activities of daily living not due to physical effects of stroke alone |
| C. Cognitive deficits do not occur exclusively in the context of a delirium | E/D. Deficits do not occur exclusively during the course of a delirium | D. Not occurring exclusively during the course of delirium | D. State of consciousness not clouded (does not meet criteria for delirium or intoxication) | G2. Preserved awareness of the environment (i.e. absence of clouding of consciousness) during a period long enough to unequivocally demonstrate G1 | No disturbance of consciousness | Exclusion criteria are disturbance of consciousness, delirium, psychosis, severe aphasia, or major sensorimotor impairment precluding neuropsychological testing |
| D. Cognitive deficits are not better explained by another mental disorder | F. Disturbance is not better accounted for by another Axis I disorder (only in AD criteria) | E. Either (1) evidence of a specific organic factor judged to be aetiologically related to the disturbance or (2) aetiological organic factor can be presumed if the disturbance cannot be accounted for by any nonorganic mental disorder | E. Either (1) evidence of a specific organic factor judged to be aetiologically related to the disturbance or (2) organic factor can be presumed if conditions other than organic mental disorder have been reasonably excluded and if the behavioural change represents cognitive impairment in a variety of areas | G4. For a confident clinical diagnosis, G1 should have been present for at least 6 months | Absence of systemic disorders or other brain diseases that in and of themselves could account for the progressive deficits in memory and cognition Onset between ages 40 and 90, most often after age 65 | Excluded are systemic disorders or other brain diseases that in and of themselves could account for deficits in memory and cognition |
Studies of EGb 761® that enrolled patients with major NCD and unambiguous aetiological sub-classification
| Author (year of publication) | Diagnostic criteria used in the study | Tests for cognitive impairment and ADL/functional scales used to support diagnosis | DSM-5 diagnoses assigned retrospectively |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nikolova 2013 [ | NINCDS-ADRDA, NINDS-AIREN | TE4D, SKT, VFT, CDT, GBS | Major NCD due to probable AD, probable vascular major NCD, major NCD due to multiple aetiologies (major NCD due to AD and vascular major NCD) |
| Herrschaft 2012 [ | NINCDS-ADRDA, NINDS-AIREN | TE4D, SKT, VFT, CDT, ADL-IS | Major NCD due to probable AD, probable vascular major NCD, major NCD due to multiple aetiologies (major NCD due to AD and vascular major NCD) |
| Ihl 2011 [ | NINCDS-ADRDA, NINDS-AIREN | TE4D, SKT, VFT, CDT, ADL-IS | Major NCD due to probable AD, probable vascular major NCD, major NCD due to multiple aetiologies (major NCD due to AD and vascular major NCD) |
| Napryeyenko 2007 [ | NINCDS-ADRDA, NINDS-AIREN | TE4D, SKT, VFT, CDT, GBS | Major NCD due to probable AD, probable vascular major NCD, major NCD due to multiple aetiologies (major NCD due to AD and vascular major NCD) |
| Yancheva 2009 [ | NINCDS-ADRDA | TE4D, SKT, VFT, CDT, GBS | Major NCD due to probable AD |
| Schneider 2005 [ | NINCDS-ADRDA | MMSE, ADAS-cog, GERRI, PDS | Major NCD due to probable AD |
| Maurer 1997 [ | NINCDS-ADRDA, DSM-III-R | BCRS, SKT, ADAS-cog | Major NCD due to probable AD |
| Le Bars 1997 [ | DSM-III-R, ICD-10 | MMSE, ADAS-cog, GERRI | Major NCD due to probable AD, probable vascular major NCD |
| Kanowski 1996 [ | DSM-III-R | MMSE, SKT, NAB | Major NCD due to probable AD, probable vascular major NCD |
ADAS-cog Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive subscale, ADL-IS Activities of Daily Living International Scale, BCRS Brief Cognitive Rating Scale, CDT Clock-Drawing Test, GBS Gottfries-Bråne-Steen Scale, GERRI Geriatric Evaluation by Relative’s Rating Instrument, MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination; PDS Progressive Deterioration Scale, SKT Syndrom-Kurztest (Short Cognitive Performance Test), TE4D Test for the Early Diagnosis of Dementia with Differentiation from Depression, VFT Verbal Fluency Test
Studies of EGb 761® that enrolled patients with major NCD, aetiological sub-classification not entirely certain or not made
| Author (year of publication) | Diagnostic criteria used in the study | Tests for cognitive impairment and ADL/functional scales used to support diagnosis | DSM-5 diagnoses assigned retrospectively |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rai 1991 [ | NINCDS-ADRDA | MMSE, Kendrick battery for the detection of dementia | Major NCD due to ADa |
| Haase 1996 [ | DSM-III-R | MMSE, GDS, KAI, NAB, NAA | Major NCD due to probable AD, possible vascular major NCD |
| Weitbrecht and Jansen 1986 [ | Not specified | WAIS digit symbol substitution test, WAIS digit span test, SCAG, Crichton Geriatric Scale | Major NCD (most likely due to AD)b |
| Oswald 1997 [ | DSM-III | SCAG, NAI | Major NCD (no aetiological sub-classification was made) |
aPatients were diagnosed in accordance with NINCDS-ADRDA criteria, but the authors did not specify whether probable AD or possible AD or both were accepted
bThe inclusion diagnosis assigned by the clinician was “primary degenerative dementia”, which was then used synonymously with dementia of the Alzheimer type, but diagnostic criteria were not specified. Hence, not all DSM-5 criteria for aetiology could be verified. The acceptable range for the Hachinski Ischaemic Score (up to 7) supports the clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease, but does not strictly exclude mixed AD/vascular aetiology
GDS Global Deterioration Scale, KAI Kurztest für Allgemeine Intelligenz (Short Test for General Intelligence), MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination, NAA Nürnberger Alters-Alltags-Skala (Nuremberg Gerontopsychological Self-Rating Scale for Activities of Daily Living), NAB Nürnberger Alters-Beobachtungs-Skala (Nuremberg Gerontopsychological Observation Scale for Activities of Daily Living), NAI Nürnberger Alters-Inventar (Nuremberg Gerontopsychological Inventory), SCAG Sandoz Clinical Assessment-Geriatric, WAIS Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
Studies of EGb 761® that accepted patients with NCD without clear distinction between major NCD and mild NCD
| Author (year of publication) | DSM-5 diagnoses |
|---|---|
| Gräßel 1992 [ | Possible vascular major NCD, possible vascular mild NCD |
| Halama 1988 [ | Possible vascular major NCD, possible vascular mild NCD |
| Hofferberth 1994 [ | Major NCD, mild NCD (aetiological sub-classification uncertain)a |
| Schubert and Halama 1993 [ | Major NCD, mild NCD (no aetiological sub-classification was made) |
| Israël 1987 [ | Major NCD, mild NCD (no aetiological sub-classification was made) |
| Wesnes 1987 [ | Major NCD, mild NCD (no aetiological sub-classification was made) |
aThe inclusion diagnosis assigned by the clinician was “senile dementia of the Alzheimer type”, but diagnostic criteria are not specified. Hence, not all DSM-5 criteria could be verified. According to inclusion criteria and data recorded at baseline, more than 75 % of patients had major NCD, for 25 % this could not be verified beyond doubt. Cognitive deficits, Hachinski Ischaemic Score and CT scan support the clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease
Studies of EGb 761® that enrolled only patients with mild NCD
| Author (year of publication) | DSM-5 diagnoses |
|---|---|
| Gavrilova 2014 [ | Mild NCD (no aetiological sub-classification was made) |
| Grass-Kapanke 2011 [ | Mild NCD (no aetiological sub-classification was made) |
| Allain 1993 [ | Mild NCD (no aetiological sub-classification was made) |
| Stocksmeier and Eberlein 1992 [ | Mild NCD (no aetiological sub-classification was made) |
Studies of EGb 761® enrolling patients not classifiable by DSM-5
| Author (year of publication) | Original diagnosis |
|---|---|
| van Dongen 2003 [ | Age-associated memory impairment (AAMI), dementiaa |
| Hofferberth 1991 [ | Organic brain syndrome with increased vascular risk |
| Halama 1990 [ | Cerebrovascular insufficiency |
| Hofferberth 1989 [ | Organic brain syndrome |
| Taillandier 1986 [ | Chronic cerebral insufficiency |
| Eckmann and Schlag 1982 [ | Cerebrovascular insufficiency |
| Dieli 1981 [ | Chronic cerebral insufficiency |
| Moreau 1975 [ | Chronic insufficiency of cerebral circulation |
aThe main inclusion diagnosis was AAMI, which could be mild NCD; a small proportion of patients were assigned a diagnosis of dementia applying DSM-III-R and ICD-10 criteria by nursing home staff not trained to diagnose dementia. The SKT scores were in the range typical for mild-to-moderate dementia, which renders the high rate of AAMI questionable. On the other hand, interference with activities of everyday life was denied for most patients. In the absence of laboratory tests and neuroimaging, the possibility of conditions other than AAMI or dementia must be taken into account and any classification in terms of NCD would be imprudent