| Literature DB >> 28138837 |
Thomas N Chase1, Martin R Farlow2, Kathleen Clarence-Smith3.
Abstract
Available cholinergic drugs for treating Alzheimer's disease (AD) provide modest symptomatic benefit. We hypothesized that co-administration of a peripheral anticholinergic to reduce dose-limiting adverse effects (AEs) would enable the safe/tolerable use of higher cholinesterase inhibitor doses and thus improve their antidementia efficacy. A modified single-blind, ascending-dose, phase IIa study of donepezil plus solifenacin (CPC-201) lasting 26 weeks was conducted in 41 patients with probable AD of moderate severity. Entry criteria included the use of donepezil at a dose of 10 mg/day during the preceding 3 months. The primary outcome measure was the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of donepezil achieved (to protocol limit of 40 mg/day) when administered with the anticholinergic solifenacin 15 mg/day. Secondary measures included assessments of cognitive and global function, as well as of AEs. The mean ± SD donepezil MTD increased to 38 ± 0.74 mg/day (median 40 mg/day; p < 0.001); 88% of the study population safely attained this dose at the end of titration. Markedly reduced donepezil AE frequency, especially gastrointestinal, allowed this dose increase. There were no drug-related serious AEs or clinically significant laboratory abnormalities. At 26 weeks, Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale Cognitive Component scores in the efficacy evaluable population improved by 0.35 ± 0.85 points over baseline (p < 0.05), an estimated 2.5 ± 0.84 points above 10 mg/day donepezil and 5.4 ± 0.84 points above historic placebo (both p < 0.05). Clinical Global Impression of Improvement scores improved by 0.94 ± 0.20 to 3.1 ± 0.20 points (p < 0.001). The findings suggest that limiting donepezil AEs by co-administration of solifenacin allows the safe administration of substantially higher cholinesterase inhibitors doses that may augment cognitive and global benefits in patients with AD.Entities:
Keywords: Dementia; anticholinergic.; cholinesterase inhibitor; clinical trial; donepezil; solifenacin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28138837 PMCID: PMC5398986 DOI: 10.1007/s13311-016-0511-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurotherapeutics ISSN: 1878-7479 Impact factor: 7.620
Summary of baseline demographics of Alzheimer’s disease patients entering CPC-201 trial
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Sex | |
| Male | 19 (46.3) |
| Female | 22 (53.7) |
| Mean ± SD age (y) | 73.1 (8.2) |
| Age range (y) | 57–88 |
| Race | |
| White | 38 (92.7) |
| Black/African American | 3 (7.3) |
| Asian | 0 (0) |
| Mean ± SD weight (kg) | 76.4 ± 18.0 |
| Weight range (kg) | 40–117 |
| Mean ± SD (median) duration of Alzheimer’s disease (y) | 3.4 ± 2.7 (3.0) |
| Range | 0.5–11 |
| Mean ± SD duration of donepezil treatment prior to study entry (d) | 833.8 ± 718.3 |
| Range | 70–2680 |
| Concomitant memantine | |
| Yes | 25 (61.0) |
| No | 16 (39.0) |
| Mean ± SD baseline ADAS-cog | 28.5 ± 8.3 |
| Range | 15–46 |
| Mean ± SD baseline MMSE | 16.5 ± 3.10 |
| Range | 11–20 |
Data are n (%) unless otherwise indicated
ADAS-cog = Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale Cognitive Component; MMSE = Mini-Mental State Examination
Fig. 1Disposition of patients with moderate Alzheimer’s disease enrolled in the study of CPC-201. No patient discontinued owing to possible or probable drug-related adverse events or to a perceived lack of efficacy. *Of 8 patients who discontinued during titration, 3 occurred during solifenacin titration and 5 during donepezil titration ‡Post-enrollment, 4 patients were excluded as ineligible pursuant to protocol
Fig. 2Maximum tolerable dose (MTD) of donepezil during preadmission monotherapy (10 mg/day) and MTD or maximum allowed donepezil dose (MAD = 40 mg/day) at completion of donepezil plus solifenacin (CPC-201) dose titration. Histogram compares donepezil doses in 33 patients with moderate AD, as determined first by history (from investigators or referring physicians) and again at completion of donepezil (plus solifenacin 15 mg/day) dose titration. A maximum donepezil dose of 25 mg/day was tolerated by 100% and of 40 mg/day by 88% of CPC-201 treated patients (*p < 0.001 for difference in donepezil dose administered as monothrerapy at baseline and co-administered with solifenacin as CPC-201 at the end of dose titration)
Treatment emergent adverse events (TEAEs) occurring in more than 1 patient, by treatment period, and preferred term, by descending order of frequency during donepezil titration period
| TEAE preferred term | Number (%) of patients | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solifenacin upward dose titration | Donepezil upward dose titration | Donepezil dose maintenance | |||||
| ( | ( | ( | |||||
| (%) | (%) | (%) | |||||
| Number of patients with any TEAE | 5 | (12.2) | 27 | (71.1) | 19 | (57.6) | |
| Diarrhea | 6 | (15.8) | 2 | (6.1) | |||
| Nausea | 4 | (10.5) | |||||
| Vomiting | 4 | (10.5) | |||||
| Abdominal discomfort | 3 | (7.9) | 1 | (3.0) | |||
| Decreased appetite | 3 | (7.9) | |||||
| Dizziness | 3 | (7.9) | 2 | (6.1) | |||
| Constipation | 1 | (2.4) | 2 | (5.3) | 1 | (3.0) | |
| Agitation | 2 | (5.3) | 1 | (3.0) | |||
| Somnolence | 2 | (5.3) | |||||
| Syncope | 2 | (5.3) | 1 | (3.0) | |||
| Tremor | 2 | (5.3) | 1 | (3.0) | |||
| Pyrexia | 2 | (5.3) | |||||
| Fall | 1 | (2.4) | 1 | (2.6) | 4 | (12.1) | |
| Abdominal pain | 1 | (2.4) | 1 | (2.6) | 1 | (3.0) | |
| Bradycardia | 1 | (2.4) | - | - | 1 | (3.0) | |
| Electrocardiogram QT prolonged | 1 | (2.6) | 1 | (3.0) | |||
| Arthralgia | 2 | (6.1) | |||||
| Paresthesia | 1 | (2.6) | 1 | (3.0) | |||
| Irritability | 1 | (2.6) | 1 | (3.0) | |||
Fig. 3Time course of Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale Cognitive Component (ADAS-cog) score (mean ± SEM) response to donepezil 40 mg/day plus solifenacin 15 mg/day (CPC-201) in 23–26 efficacy evaluable patients with moderate Alzheimer’s disease during the 26-week study and to donepezil 10 mg/day monotherapy as derived from meta-analysis of comparable randomized controlled trials as described in text. Donepezil dose titration until week 12 was followed by stable dose maintenance for 14 additional weeks. Negative ADAS-cog values indicate improvement *p = 0.051 for difference from donepezil monotherapy
Effect of CPC-201 treatment on cognitive function in patients with moderate Alzheimer’s disease measured by Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale Cognitive Component (ADAS-cog) changes from baseline and estimated from 10 mg donepezil and from placebo response
| Mean treatment weeks | Median donepezil dose (mg/kg) | Number of patients | ADAS-cog difference from: | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline* | Aricept 10 mg† | Placebo† | |||
| 14 | 40 | 26 | −0.55 ± 0.92 | −1.6 ± 0.88 | −4.5 ± 0.88‡ |
| 18 | 40 | 25 | −1.1 ± 1.1 | −2.5 ± 1.1‡ | −5.4 ± 1.1‡ |
| 22 | 40 | 24 | −0.61 ± 1.1 | −2.4 ± 1.1‡ | −5.3 ± 1.1‡ |
| 26 | 40 | 23 | −0.35 ± 0.85 | −2.5 ± 0.84‡ | −5.4 ± 0.84‡ |
ADAS-cog scores from the evaluable population are the means ± SEM, with negative scores indicating improvement
*Differences from baseline measured during stable maximum tolerated dose maintenance at the times after CPC-201 treatment initiation specified
†Differences from values for 10 mg/day donepezil and placebo derive from meta-analyses of results from comparable randomized controlled trials meeting Cochrane Collaboration quality guidelines, as described in the text
‡p < 0.05
Effect of 26 weeks of CPC-201 treatment on global function in patients with moderate Alzheimer’s disease as measured by the Clinical Global Impression of Improvement (CGI-I) scale
| Rater | CGI-I score (mean ± SEM) | Change from baseline (mean ± SEM) |
|---|---|---|
| Investigator | 3.3 ± 0.19 | −0.75 ± 0.19* |
| Caregiver | 2.9 ± 0.27 | −1.1 ± 0.27* |
| Combined | 3.1 ± 0.20 | −0.94 ± 0.20* |
Values are from 16 evaluable patients at the completion of 26 weeks treatment with CPC-201 containing a median donepezil dose of 40 mg/day. Baseline score is 4 (no change) on a 7-point scale ranging from 1 (marked improvement) to 7 (marked worsening). Negative changes indicate improvement
*p < 0.01
Fig. 4Histogram of global response to donepezil (median dose of 40 mg/day) plus solifenacin (15 mg/day) administered as CPC-201 at end of 26-week study in 11 efficacy evaluable patients with moderate Alzheimer’s disease. The Clinical Global Impression of Improvement (CGI-I) was scored on a 7-point scale by both investigators and caregivers
Fig. 5Peak plasma donepezil (Cmax) concentrations at all doses administered during ascending CPC-201 dose titration to 41 patients with moderate Alzheimer’s disease. *No solifenacin co-administration; all other donepezil doses given with 15 mg/day solifenacin