Literature DB >> 26622172

Real-world evaluation of compliance and preference in Alzheimer's disease treatment.

Ming-Chyi Pai1, Hany Aref2, Nazem Bassil3, Nagaendran Kandiah4, Jae-Hong Lee5, A V Srinivasan6, Shelley diTommaso7, Ozgur Yuksel7.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Rivastigmine transdermal patch has shown higher caregiver satisfaction and greater preference than oral formulation in patients with Alzheimer's disease. However, there is limited literature available related to caregiver preference or treatment compliance in real-world clinical settings. To date, no such data are available from Asia and the Middle East, which account for a sizeable proportion of patients with Alzheimer's disease. The objective of this study was to evaluate treatment preference and compliance with oral and transdermal medications in daily clinical practice in an ethnically diverse patient population from Asia and the Middle East with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's disease. PATIENTS AND METHODS: RECAP (Real-world Evaluation of Compliance And Preference in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease) was a 24-week, multicenter, prospective, noninterventional study. Two treatment cohorts were observed during the study: oral (cholinesterase inhibitors or memantine) and transdermal (rivastigmine patch). Caregiver preference, physician preference, and patient compliance were evaluated at week 24.
RESULTS: A total of 978 of 1,931 enrolled patients (mean age: 72.8 years; 50.5% female) were in the transdermal cohort. For patients with exposure to both oral and transdermal monotherapy (n=330), a significant caregivers' preference for the transdermal monotherapy was observed (82.7%; P<0.0001). Of the 89 participating physicians, 71 indicated preference for transdermal monotherapy. Patient compliance was also significantly higher for transdermal than oral monotherapy (P<0.0001).
CONCLUSION: Our study showed higher caregiver and physician preference and greater patient compliance with transdermal monotherapy in daily practice.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Alzheimer’s disease; cholinesterase inhibitors; observational study; patient compliance; rivastigmine; transdermal patch

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26622172      PMCID: PMC4639476          DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S85319

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Interv Aging        ISSN: 1176-9092            Impact factor:   4.458


Introduction

Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a progressive neurodegenerative disorder, accounts for up to 75% of all dementia cases.1 Worldwide, more than 35 million people live with AD, and this number is expected to double by 2030 and reach 115 million by 2050.2 The progression of symptoms in patients with AD can be delayed by early and aggressive treatment management;3,4 however, patient compliance to treatment remains a challenge.5 As the disease progresses, patients with AD require increased assistance from their caregivers. Caregivers, especially family members, play a key role in the care and treatment compliance of patients with AD.5,6 The currently approved oral symptomatic treatments for AD are donepezil, galantamine, rivastigmine (cholinesterase inhibitors), and memantine (N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor antagonist).7 Rivastigmine is also available as a transdermal formulation that provides continuous delivery over 24 hours and results in fewer side effects compared with oral rivastigmine.8,9 The efficacy and safety of the rivastigmine transdermal formulation have been demonstrated in various randomized controlled trials.10–13 However, there is limited literature available on the caregiver and physician treatment preference and patient compliance with transdermal rivastigmine in a real-world clinical setting.14–17 To date, no such study is available in patients from Asia and the Middle East, despite this part of the world accounting for a sizeable proportion of patients with AD. The present study was designed to evaluate the treatment preference and compliance in an ethnically diverse population from Asia and the Middle East with mild-to-moderate AD treated with oral (cholinesterase inhibitors or memantine) or transdermal monotherapy (rivastigmine patch) in a real-world clinical setting. Patients in this study were treated according to the usual care and not by the protocol. This study reports “real-world” evidence. The real world characterizes the fact that data collected in this study originated from the routine medical care of patients.

Patients and methods

Study design

RECAP (Real-world Evaluation of Compliance And Preference in the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease) was a 24-week, multicenter, prospective, noninterventional study conducted at 92 participating sites in India (24 sites), Egypt (34 sites), South Korea (15 sites), Taiwan (9 sites), Lebanon (8 sites), and Singapore (2 sites) between March 2011 and July 2013 (Figure 1). Patients were invited to participate as they were prescribed a capsule or a transdermal patch therapy by their treating physician for AD. The patients participated in this study after providing written informed consent, or where applicable, such consent provided by a legally acceptable representative of the patient. The eligible patients were grouped into one of the two treatment cohorts according to the route of administration of the AD medication taken at the study entry: oral (donepezil, galantamine, rivastigmine, or memantine) or transdermal (rivastigmine). The observational period for each participant was 24 weeks (±8 weeks). Data were collected at three time points: study entry (baseline), week 12 (±4 weeks), and week 24 (±8 weeks; end of the study).
Figure 1

Patient disposition.

Notes: A patient having completed visits up to visit 3 (week 24) was considered having completed the study.

Aligning with the definition of noninterventional study (Article 2[c] EU Directive 2001/20/EC),18 the medications under observation were prescribed in compliance with the marketing authorization, and the treatment decision was made as part of patients’ usual medical care and before study participation. No diagnostic or monitoring procedures, in addition to usual care, were performed. Study participation included completion of the Caregiver Medication Questionnaire (CMQ) at the end of the study. The CMQ included questions derived from AD Caregiver Preference Questionnaire (ADCPQ) that was psychometrically validated using data from the IDEAL (Investigation of transDermal Exelon in ALzheimer’s disease) study.13,19,20 The study was approved by the institutional review board, independent ethics committee, or research ethics board of each of the 92 sites and was conducted in accordance with the applicable guidelines and ethical principles of the Declaration of Helsinki.21,22 Informed consent was obtained before the data were collected. The patients were free to withdraw their consent to participate in the study at any stage.

Study participants

Male and female patients with mild-to-moderate AD who were at least 50 years of age were included in the study. Furthermore, patients were included in the study if they were prescribed oral or transdermal monotherapy (cholinesterase inhibitors or memantine) in adherence with the local prescribing information (ie, locally approved product label) and having a caregiver willing and able to answer the CMQ. Patients were excluded if contraindicated as per the local prescribing information/summary of product characteristics.

Study objectives and assessments

The primary objectives included evaluation of caregivers’ preference and caregivers’ assessment of patient compliance, using the CMQ at the end of the study. The CMQ included questions on patient compliance and satisfaction with treatment, general preference (oral versus transdermal treatment), and top three reasons for treatment preference. The caregivers indicated their preference by comparing their experience with the current medication form used during the study with a hypothetical situation where their patient could have received the medication in the alternative form. The patient’s compliance for the current medication was rated on an 11-point scale (0= “Never took the medication as prescribed” up to a maximum of 10= “Always took the medication as prescribed”). The secondary objectives assessed at the end of the study were to describe the concomitant use of psychotropic medication (yes/no) and the number of psychotropic medications used (1, 2, 3, or >3) per patient, to assess physicians’ preference for the oral or patch medication (including top three reasons for preference), and to evaluate the drug regimen among patients on cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine (the total daily dosage reached). Physicians’ preference for treatment was assessed using a short physician’s preference assessment questionnaire. The total scores for the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) at the baseline and the end of the study were also recorded. The safety assessments included recording of frequency of adverse events (AEs) and discontinuations of treatment.

Sample size and data analysis

Sample size was based on practical considerations rather than on statistical. The sample-size calculation was based on precision (in terms of width of the two-sided 95% confidence interval), assuming a preference rate for transdermal patches of 60% and 70%, and this assumption was based on the IDEAL study.13,19 This study was conducted as individual studies in six countries (India, Egypt, South Korea, Taiwan, Lebanon, and Singapore), and the data from all countries were pooled and analyzed. The full analysis set consisted of all patients who provided informed consent and received at least one dose of the medication under observation in this study. The effectiveness set excluded patients without any postbaseline effectiveness assessment. In addition, the effectiveness data collected after the time of treatment switch were excluded for any patient who switched the treatment cohort during the study. The effectiveness analyses were conducted on the effectiveness set, and all other analyses were conducted on the full analysis set. Descriptive statistics was used to present demographics and other baseline characteristics. Summary statistics for continuous variables included the number of observations (n), arithmetic mean, standard deviation (SD), minimum observations, lower quartile, median, upper quartile, and maximum observations. Categorical variables were presented with absolute and relative frequencies. A two-sided 95% confidence interval as well as P-values were presented for the caregivers’ preferences and overall compliance rating for oral or transdermal patch. The 95% confidence intervals were calculated as exact binomial confidence intervals. The analysis of covariance was used to show significant differences in patient compliance depending on the use of the oral or patch medication at the end of the study. Statistical significance on the two-sided significance level was set at P<0.05. All statistical analyses were performed using SAS statistical package version 9.2 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA).

Results

Patient population and disposition

Of the 1,931 patients enrolled, 953 (49.4%) were in the oral monotherapy cohort and 978 (50.6%) were in the transdermal monotherapy cohort. Overall, 1,635 (84.7%) patients completed the study (oral monotherapy: 822 and transdermal monotherapy: 813; Figure 1). The baseline and demographic characteristics were comparable between the two treatment cohorts (Table 1). In the total study population, the mean (SD) age was 72.8 (8.34) years. Female sex is a known risk factor for AD in part due to the fact that women live longer; however, we observed a lower percentage of female patients (50.5%) in the present noninterventional study compared with other studies.23–25 The majority of patients were of Asian ethnicity (1,327, 68.7%). The mean (SD) duration of AD was 0.9 (1.42) years and a total of 12.8% of patients had a family history of AD, specifically, 11.6% had a parent or sibling with AD. The most commonly reported psychiatric disorders at baseline were depression (599, 31.0%), insomnia (492, 25.5%), anxiety (476, 24.7%), sleep disorder (421, 21.8%), agitation (368, 19.1%), delusion (287, 14.9%), and neurosis (124, 6.4%). Overall, there were 518 (26.8%) patients who experienced any treatment for AD prior to start of the study, and the proportion of patients who had AD therapy were comparable between the two treatment cohorts (oral: 21.9% and transdermal: 31.6%). The mean (SD) MMSE scores at baseline were 17.8 (4.70) and 17.7 (4.67) in the oral and transdermal monotherapy cohorts, respectively. Most patients enrolled in the study (1,771, 91.7%) were living with a caregiver or other individuals.
Table 1

Patient demographics and baseline characteristics

Oral monotherapy cohort, n=953Transdermal monotherapy cohort, n=978Total, N=1,931
Age, yearsa72.6 (8.45)72.9 (8.24)72.8 (8.34)
Sex, n (%)
 Male470 (49.3)485 (49.6)955 (49.5)
 Female483 (50.7)493 (50.4)976 (50.5)
Race, n (%)b
 Caucasian262 (27.5)260 (26.6)522 (27.0)
 Asian656 (68.8)671 (68.6)1,327 (68.7)
 Others34 (3.6)47 (4.8)81 (4.2)
Patient’s formal education, years8.7 (6.02)9.1 (5.92)8.9 (5.97)
Duration of AD, years0.9 (1.53)0.8 (1.30)0.9 (1.42)
Prior treatment for ADc
 Drug therapy209 (21.9)309 (31.6)518 (26.8)
 No drug therapy744 (78.1)668 (68.3)1,412 (73.1)
Prior psychotropic concomitant medicationd
 Yes246 (25.8)264 (27.0)510 (26.4)
 No706 (74.1)710 (72.6)1,416 (73.3)
Any family history of ADe
 Yes132 (13.9)115 (11.8)247 (12.8)
 No820 (86.0)862 (88.1)1,682 (87.1)
Current smokerf
 Yes92 (9.7)104 (10.6)196 (10.2)
 No860 (90.2)873 (89.3)1,733 (89.7)
Alcohol history
 Less than 1 drink per dayg904 (94.9)934 (95.5)1,838 (95.2)
 1–2 drinks per day38 (4.0)37 (3.8)75 (3.9)
 3 or more drinks per day10 (1.0)6 (0.6)16 (0.8)
Current living situation, n (%)h
 Living alone49 (5.1)51 (5.2)100 (5.2)
 Living with caregiver or other individual879 (92.2)892 (91.2)1,771 (91.7)
 Assisted living/group home24 (2.5)34 (3.5)58 (3.0)
 MMSE17.8 (4.70)17.7 (4.67)17.8 (4.68)

Notes:

Information about age was missing for one patient in the oral monotherapy cohort.

Information about race was missing for one patient in the oral monotherapy cohort.

Information about any prior treatment for AD was missing for two patients (one in each cohort).

Information about any prior treatment for AD with psychotropic medication was missing for one patient in the oral monotherapy cohort and four patients in the transdermal monotherapy cohort.

Family history of AD was missing for two patients (one in each cohort).

Information about current smoker was missing for two patients (one in each cohort).

Alcohol history was missing for two patients (one in each cohort).

Information about current living situation was missing for two patients (one in each cohort). Data are shown as mean (SD), unless otherwise stated.

Abbreviations: AD, Alzheimer’s disease; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; SD, standard deviation.

Primary assessments

For patients with exposure only to either the oral or transdermal monotherapy, the caregivers’ preference at week 24 was significantly in favor of the treatment to which the patient was exposed (P<0.0001 for both cohorts). However, the caregivers of patients who were exposed to both forms of therapies demonstrated a higher preference for the transdermal monotherapy compared with the oral monotherapy (P<0.0001; Figure 2). Patient compliance was significantly higher in the transdermal monotherapy cohort than the oral monotherapy cohort (P<0.0001; Figure 3), and there was a numerically greater proportion of patients who “always took the medication as prescribed” in the transdermal monotherapy cohort according to caregivers’ assessments (28.6% versus 24.9%, respectively) at week 24.
Figure 2

Caregiver preference for oral or transdermal medication at the end of the study, by prior exposure.

Notes: *A P-value of <0.05 indicates a statistically significant difference in proportions between the two cohorts. P-value is based on a binomial test statistic to compare two proportions. The 95% CIs were calculated as exact binomial CIs. Exposed to oral and transdermal patch medication, of the 308 questionnaires, two were answered after patient switched from baseline therapy and were therefore not considered for statistical analyses. aPatients in the effectiveness set with missing caregiver preference assessment were not included in the calculations.

Abbreviation: CI, confidence interval.

Figure 3

Caregiver assessment of patient compliance to treatment at the end of the study.

Notes: *A P-value of <0.05 indicates a statistically significant difference in the mean scores between the two cohorts. P-value is based on Student’s t-test statistic to compare two means. A two-sided 95% confidence interval for the mean score for oral and transdermal monotherapy cohorts based on Student’s t-test statistic. Patient compliance rated on an 11-point scale from 0= “Never took the medication as prescribed” up to a maximum of 10= “Always took the medication as prescribed” using the Caregiver Medication Questionnaire. Patients in the effectiveness set with missing assessment of compliance were not included in the calculations. Compliance was assessed at the end of the study. The end of the study was at visit 3 (week 24).

Secondary assessments

In the total study population, there were 22.9%, 14.3%, 5.4%, and 3.6% of patients who took one, two, three, and more than three psychotropic medications, respectively. Furthermore, the use of concomitant psychotropic medication and the number of different psychotropic medications per patient were comparable between the two treatment cohorts. There was a higher physician preference for transdermal monotherapy. Of the 89 participating physicians, most indicated preference for transdermal (79.8%) over oral (20.2%) monotherapy at the end of the study. The reasons ranked by physicians preferring patch medication as most important (preference rank 1) were “easier to use” (33.8%) followed by “easier to comply” (19.7%) and “easier to administer” (18.3%; Figure 4); and the most important reasons (preference rank 1) for physicians to prefer oral medication was “easier to comply/better acceptance by the patient” (44.4%) followed by “easier to use” (22.2%) and “easier to administer” (16.7%).
Figure 4

First ranking reason for physician preference for patch medication at the end of the study.

Notes: Of the 89 physicians, 71 indicated preference for transdermal compared with 18 for oral monotherapy at the end of the study. Information was collected only once for each physician.

Overall, more patients (60.5%) on memantine reached the highest therapeutic dose compared with patients on oral and transdermal cholinesterase inhibitors. A greater percentage (49.6%) of patients treated with transdermal rivastigmine reached the highest therapeutic dose compared with patients treated with oral cholinesterase inhibitors including oral rivastigmine (Figure 5).
Figure 5

Drug regimen among patients on cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine at the end of the study.

Notes: For patients who switched therapy during the study, the last monotherapy dosing has been used.

The change in the MMSE scores from baseline to the end of the study was obtained from a total of 1,301 (76%) patients in the effectiveness set. The mean (SD) MMSE scores at the end of the study were 18.6 (4.53) and 19.1 (4.57) in the oral and transdermal monotherapy cohorts, respectively. At the end of the study, the mean (SD) MMSE score increased by 0.5 (3.21) in the oral monotherapy cohort and by 1.4 (3.27) in the transdermal monotherapy cohort.

Safety

A total of 341 (17.7%) patients reported AEs, with a comparable proportion in the two treatment cohorts (oral monotherapy: 163 [17.1%] and transdermal monotherapy: 178 [18.2%]). The number of patients with pruritus and rash was higher in the transdermal monotherapy cohort (30 [3.1%] and 22 [2.2%], respectively) than in the oral monotherapy cohort (2 [0.2%] and 1 [0.1%], respectively), whereas the number of patients with nausea and vomiting was higher in the oral monotherapy cohort (22 [2.3%] and 16 [1.7%], respectively) than in the transdermal monotherapy cohort (8 [0.8%] and 2 [0.2%], respectively). Of the 1,931 patients enrolled in the study, 73 (3.8%) discontinued prematurely from the study because of AEs (oral: 30 [3.1%]; transdermal: 43 [4.4%]). The most common AEs leading to discontinuation were rash (oral: 0 [0%]; transdermal: 16 [1.6%]), pruritus (oral: 0 [0%]; transdermal: 15 [1.5%]), vomiting (oral: 13 [1.4%]; transdermal: 1 [0.1%]), nausea (oral: 5 [0.5%]; transdermal: 0 [0%]), and decreased appetite (oral: 4 [0.4%]; transdermal: 0 [0%]). There was a higher incidence of nonserious AEs leading to discontinuation in the transdermal than in the oral monotherapy cohort (41 [4.2%] for transdermal and 27 [2.8%] for oral). The number of patients with serious AEs was slightly higher in the oral monotherapy cohort (40 [4.2%] for oral and 31 [3.2%] for transdermal). Of the 11 (0.6%) deaths during the study, 5 (0.5%) were from the oral monotherapy cohort and 6 (0.6%) were from the transdermal monotherapy cohort; none were related to the study medications as assessed by the investigators.

Discussion

AD is the most common type of dementia where compliance with oral therapies is an issue.5 About half of the patients have been reported to have discontinued the use of cholinesterase inhibitors within 6–12 months.26–28 More than 74% of patients need assistance from their caregivers for medication management;28,29 hence, caregivers play a key role in the treatment selection and compliance. The management and administration of AD medications contribute to caregiver burden.5,30 Simplifying the treatment regimens and using alternative modes of administration may help to reduce the caregiver burden, which, in turn, may result in improved treatment compliance and have a positive impact on the patient’s condition.5 RECAP was a 24-week, multicenter, prospective, noninterventional study that showed that the majority (82.7%) of caregivers preferred rivastigmine transdermal monotherapy over oral monotherapy in patients who were exposed to both the modes of administration. Similarly, most physicians (79.8%) indicated preference for the transdermal route and cited ease of use, ease of administration, and ease of compliance as the most important reasons for preference. Caregivers’ preference for treatment of AD has been previously assessed in various other studies. IDEAL, the first pivotal trial that demonstrated efficacy of the transdermal patch rivastigmine,11,13 also showed higher caregivers’ preference (72%) for the transdermal monotherapy compared with the oral monotherapy.19 Similarly, the EMBRACE (Effective Management of Alzheimer’s disease By tReating pAtients and relieving Caregivers with Exelon patch) study, which assessed the real-life effectiveness and tolerability of rivastigmine patch, showed high caregivers’ preference (88.2%) for the patch over oral medication in patients with mild-to-moderate AD.15 Moreover, results from a recent observational study in patients with mild-to-moderate AD have reported that the transdermal formulation of rivastigmine reduces caregiver burden in daily practice.31 Compared with these studies, the RECAP study was unique in geographical scope and was conducted in countries where patients with AD are reported to live predominantly in households with extended families.32 It could be expected that there would be lower caregiver burden with the traditional arrangement of family care; however, the difference in caregiver burden because of extended families has been reported to be negligible.32 The treatment noncompliance in chronic progressive disorders is known to result in poor disease control, rapid disease progression, and increased economic burden.33,34 Perceived lack of effectiveness, side effects, forgetfulness, and the burden of complex drug regimens are the most common reasons for low compliance in AD.5,30 The use of cholinesterase inhibitors is associated with a decreased risk of rapid cognitive deterioration, institutionalization, and increased patient’s and caregiver’s quality of life.35–38 In the present study, the overall patient compliance for the transdermal patch was significantly greater than that for oral monotherapy. These results were consistent with the findings from the AXEPT (Alzheimer disease: eXamination of patiEnt comPliance and caregiver satisfacTion) study where compliance and satisfaction reported by caregivers were significantly higher with the transdermal rivastigmine patch than with the oral medications.14 Hence, the present study substantiated that the once-daily rivastigmine patch offers a user-friendly treatment alternative to achieve higher treatment compliance in patients with mild-to-moderate AD. It is recommended to escalate the dose of cholinesterase inhibitors to the highest tolerated dose within the approved dose range for better outcomes.3 The higher cholinesterase inhibitor doses were associated with better cognitive and functional longitudinal outcomes,39 less home help services use,40 delayed nursing home placement,41 and prolonged life expectancy.42 There results indicate that there is a need for optimizing the dose of cholinesterase inhibitors for the individual patients with AD. In the present study, a higher percentage of patients were able to reach a higher daily dose with the transdermal monotherapy compared with the oral cholinesterase inhibitor monotherapies, owing to lower gastrointestinal AEs with the transdermal patch. Transdermal administration provides a continuous delivery of rivastigmine through the skin into the bloodstream, avoiding first pass metabolism and allowing a better dose escalation strategy to improve the treatment outcomes.43 Despite the higher incidence of rash and pruritus in the transdermal group during the present study, caregivers preferred the transdermal route. Several other studies have also shown that the transdermal delivery of rivastigmine allows more patients to reach and maintain the therapeutic dose, offering additional therapeutic benefits as well as contributing to improved treatment compliance.19,43,44 The limitations of the current study were the nonrandomized methodology and the possibility of bias due to the inherent nature of observational, open-label research. The strength of this study was that it was conducted under “real-world” medical practice conditions, and there were a large number of patients from Asia and the Middle East where published data are limited in the literature until now and therefore the data coming from this study is important.

Conclusion

Our study showed higher caregiver and physician preference and greater patient compliance with the transdermal monotherapy in daily practice in an ethnically diverse population of patients with mild-to-moderate AD from Asia and the Middle East. Overall, the results provided evidence that the once-daily rivastigmine patch offers a user-friendly treatment alternative to achieve higher patient compliance and dose escalation for better outcomes.
  42 in total

1.  Treatment persistency with rivastigmine and donepezil in a large state medicaid program.

Authors:  Gurkirpal Singh; Simu K Thomas; Steve Arcona; Vijayabharathi Lingala; Alka Mithal
Journal:  J Am Geriatr Soc       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 5.562

2.  Caregiver preference for rivastigmine patch relative to capsules for treatment of probable Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Bengt Winblad; Ariane K Kawata; Kathleen M Beusterien; Simu K Thomas; Anders Wimo; Roger Lane; Howard Fillit; Rafael Blesa
Journal:  Int J Geriatr Psychiatry       Date:  2007-05       Impact factor: 3.485

3.  [Profile of the informal carer associated with the clinical management of the Alzheimer's disease patient refractory to symptomatic treatment of the disease].

Authors:  J L Molinuevo; B Hernández
Journal:  Neurologia       Date:  2011-07-30       Impact factor: 3.109

4.  Risk factors for nursing home placement in Alzheimer's disease: a longitudinal study of cognition, ADL, service utilization, and cholinesterase inhibitor treatment.

Authors:  Carina Wattmo; Asa K Wallin; Elisabet Londos; Lennart Minthon
Journal:  Gerontologist       Date:  2010-06-20

5.  A six-month double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study of a transdermal patch in Alzheimer's disease--rivastigmine patch versus capsule.

Authors:  Bengt Winblad; Jeffrey Cummings; Niels Andreasen; George Grossberg; Marco Onofrj; Carl Sadowsky; Stefanie Zechner; Jennifer Nagel; Roger Lane
Journal:  Int J Geriatr Psychiatry       Date:  2007-05       Impact factor: 3.485

Review 6.  A rivastigmine patch for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease dementia.

Authors:  Jeffrey Cummings; Bengt Winblad
Journal:  Expert Rev Neurother       Date:  2007-11       Impact factor: 4.618

7.  [Rivastigmine as treatment for patients with mild to moderately severe Alzheimer disease under normal clinical practice conditions. The ENTERPRISE study].

Authors:  A J Cruz Jentoft; B Hernández
Journal:  Neurologia       Date:  2013-04-10       Impact factor: 3.109

Review 8.  A review of compliance to treatment in Alzheimer's disease: potential benefits of a transdermal patch.

Authors:  Gary Small; Bruno Dubois
Journal:  Curr Med Res Opin       Date:  2007-11       Impact factor: 2.580

9.  Risk factors and type of dementia: vascular or Alzheimer?

Authors:  Mustafa Cankurtaran; Burcu Balam Yavuz; Eylem Sahin Cankurtaran; Meltem Halil; Zekeriya Ulger; Servet Ariogul
Journal:  Arch Gerontol Geriatr       Date:  2007-08-10       Impact factor: 3.250

10.  A 24-week, randomized, controlled trial of rivastigmine patch 13.3 mg/24 h versus 4.6 mg/24 h in severe Alzheimer's dementia.

Authors:  Martin R Farlow; George T Grossberg; Carl H Sadowsky; Xiangyi Meng; Monique Somogyi
Journal:  CNS Neurosci Ther       Date:  2013-08-07       Impact factor: 5.243

View more
  4 in total

Review 1.  Transdermal Drug Delivery Systems and Their Use in Obesity Treatment.

Authors:  Zhiguo Li; Xuexun Fang; Dahai Yu
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-11-25       Impact factor: 5.923

2.  A Qualitative Study to Assess US Patient Preferences between new Transdermal System and Injectable Anabolic Therapies for Osteoporosis Treatment.

Authors:  Charlotte Beaudart; Stuart Silverman; Deborah T Gold; Setareh A Williams; Rich Weiss; Mickael Hiligsmann
Journal:  Arch Osteoporos       Date:  2022-04-04       Impact factor: 2.617

3.  Differences in treatment for Alzheimer's disease between urban and rural areas in China.

Authors:  Bei Li; Dejun Liu; Qiaoqin Wan; Can Sheng; Xiting Wang; Fangda Leng; Qing Peng; Ting Wang; Ailian Du; Feiqi Zhu; Dunzhu Mima; Huali Wang; Hengge Xie; Zhaoxia Wang; Haiqiang Jin; Yongan Sun
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2022-09-29       Impact factor: 4.086

4.  Real-world evaluation of compliance and preference in Alzheimer's disease treatment: an observational study in Taiwan.

Authors:  Tzu-Hsien Lai; Wen-Fu Wang; Bak-Sau Yip; Yu-Wan Yang; Giia-Sheun Peng; Shih-Jei Tsai; Yi-Chu Liao; Ming-Chyi Pai
Journal:  Patient Prefer Adherence       Date:  2016-03-30       Impact factor: 2.711

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.