| Literature DB >> 29260466 |
A Ardura-Fabregat1, E W G M Boddeke2, A Boza-Serrano3, S Brioschi4, S Castro-Gomez5, K Ceyzériat6,7, C Dansokho8, T Dierkes8,9, G Gelders10, Michael T Heneka11,12, L Hoeijmakers13, A Hoffmann14, L Iaccarino15,16, S Jahnert5, K Kuhbandner17, G Landreth18, N Lonnemann19, P A Löschmann20, R M McManus8, A Paulus3, K Reemst13, J M Sanchez-Caro8, A Tiberi21, A Van der Perren10, A Vautheny6,7, C Venegas5, A Webers5, P Weydt5, T S Wijasa8, X Xiang22,23, Y Yang3.
Abstract
Over the past few decades, research on Alzheimer's disease (AD) has focused on pathomechanisms linked to two of the major pathological hallmarks of extracellular deposition of beta-amyloid peptides and intra-neuronal formation of neurofibrils. Recently, a third disease component, the neuroinflammatory reaction mediated by cerebral innate immune cells, has entered the spotlight, prompted by findings from genetic, pre-clinical, and clinical studies. Various proteins that arise during neurodegeneration, including beta-amyloid, tau, heat shock proteins, and chromogranin, among others, act as danger-associated molecular patterns, that-upon engagement of pattern recognition receptors-induce inflammatory signaling pathways and ultimately lead to the production and release of immune mediators. These may have beneficial effects but ultimately compromise neuronal function and cause cell death. The current review, assembled by participants of the Chiclana Summer School on Neuroinflammation 2016, provides an overview of our current understanding of AD-related immune processes. We describe the principal cellular and molecular players in inflammation as they pertain to AD, examine modifying factors, and discuss potential future therapeutic targets.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29260466 PMCID: PMC5747579 DOI: 10.1007/s40263-017-0483-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Drugs ISSN: 1172-7047 Impact factor: 5.749
Randomized clinical trials of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in patients with Alzheimer’s disease
| Drug | Trial details (phase, design, duration of treatment) | Participants | Primary endpoint (s) | Main effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aspirin 75 mg od | Phase III, randomized open-label, 3 years | 310 AD pts | MMSE and BADLs | No effect on cognition, increased risk of bleeds | [ |
| Indomethacin 100–150 mg od vs. PL | Pilot study, randomized 1:1, 6 months | 28 AD dementia pts | Psychometric tests | Positive effects on a battery of psychometric tests | [ |
| Indomethacin 100 mg od with omeprazole vs. PL | Pilot study, randomized 1:1, 1 year | 51 pts with mild-to-moderate AD | ADAS-cog score | Not significant effect on ADAS-cog score | [ |
| Naproxen sodium or rofecoxib 220 mg naproxen bid or rofecoxib 25 mg od vs. PL | Phase III, randomized 1:1, 1 year | 351 pts with mild-to-moderate AD | ADAS-cog score | Not significant effect on ADAS-cog score | [ |
| Nimesulide 100 mg bid vs. PL | Pilot study, randomized 1:1 and open-label, 3 months | 40 AD dementia pts | Tolerability and short-term cognitive/behavioral effects | Not apparent effect on a composite of cognitive, behavioral and functional outcomes | [ |
| Rofecoxib 25 mg od vs. PL | Phase III, randomized 1:1, 4 years | 1457 MCI pts | Annual AD diagnosis | Lower annual AD diagnosis but no significant effect on ADAS-cog score | [ |
| Celecoxib or naproxen sodium 100 mg bid or naproxen sodium 220 mg bid vs. PL | Phase III, randomized 1:1:1.5, 1–3 years | 2528 healthy individuals with family history of AD | Seven tests of cognitive function and a global summary score measured annually | Not significant effect on a battery of neuropsychological tests | [ |
| Celecoxib or naproxen sodium, follow-up ADAPT study | 2–4 years follow-up after termination of treatment | 2071 participants randomized in ADAPT | Incidence of AD | Not significant effect for celecoxib. Reduced AD onset and CSF tau to Aβ1-42 ratio for naproxen | [ |
| Celecoxib or naproxen sodium follow-up | 5–7 years follow-up after termination of treatment | 1537 participants randomized in ADAPT | Cognitive evaluation test scores | Not significant delay on onset of AD | [ |
AD Alzheimer’s disease, ADAPT Alzheimer’s Disease Anti-inflammatory, ADAS-cog Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive portion, BADLs basic activities of daily living, bid twice daily, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, MCI mild cognitive impairment, MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination, od once daily, PL placebo, pt(s) patient(s)
Adapted from Heneka et al. [396]
Clinical trials of non-non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in patients with Alzheimer’s disease
| Drug and dosage regimen | Trial details (phase, design, duration of treatment) | Participants | Primary endpoint (s) | Main effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PPARγ antagonists | |||||
| RSG 2, 4, or 8 mg od vs. PL | Phase III, ran 1:1, 24 wk | 511 pts mild-to-moderate AD | ADAS-Cog and CIBIC + in ITT population | Significant interaction between | [ |
| PIO 15–30 mg od | Pilot study, ran, ol, 6 mo | 42 pts mild AD | rCBF and plasma levels of Aβ40 and Aβ42 | Improved cognition and rCBF in parietal lobe | [ |
| PIO 45 mg od vs. PL, and Vit. E 200 IU od | Pilot study, ran 1:1, 18 mo | 25 pts probable AD | Frequency of reported AEs | Principal AE was peripheral edema (28.6% PIO vs. 0% PL) | [ |
| PIO | Pro cohort study, 6 y | 145,928 subjects aged ≥ 60 y | Long-term use of PIO reduced dementia risk by 47% | [ | |
| RSG od PL, 2 or 8 mg RSG XR or DON 10 mg (control) | Phase III, ran 1:1, 24 wk | 639 pts probable AD | Change in ADAS-Cog score and CIBIC+ | Significant difference CIBIC+. Peripheral edema was the most common AE for RSG XR 8 mg (15%) | [ |
| RSG 4 mg od vs. PL | Pilot study, ran 1:1, 6 mo | 30 subjects mild AD or amnestic MCI | Cognitive performance and plasma Aβ levels | Better delayed recall (at 4 and 6 mo) and selective attention (6 mo) | [ |
| RSG 2 or 8 mg od | Phase III, ran 1:1 48 wk | 2981 pts mild-to-moderate AD | Change from baseline in ADAS-cog and CDR-SB scores | Relevant differences between treatment groups | [ |
| TNFα inhibitors | |||||
| Perispinal ETA 25–50 mg ow | pro, single-center, ol, pilot (proof-of-concept) study, 6 mo | 15 pts mild-to-severe AD | MMSE, ADAS-cog, SIB | Significant improvement by all primary efficacy variables | [ |
| Perispinal ETA 25–50 mg ow | pro, single-center, ol, pilot study, 6 mo | 12 pts mild-to-severe AD | California Verbal Learning Test-Second Edition, Adult Version; WMS-LM-II, TMT; Boston Naming Test FAS, and category verbal fluency | Significant improvement by all primary efficacy variables except Boston Naming Test | [ |
| SC ETA 50 mg ow | Pilot study, ran 1:1, 24 wk | 41 pts mild to moderate AD | Cognition, global function, behavior, systemic cytokine levels | Trends but no statistically significant changes in cognition, behavior, or global function | [ |
| Microglia inhibitor | |||||
| ITA (CHF5074; CSP1103) 200, 400 or 600 mg od or PL | Pilot study, ran 1:1, pg, ascending dose, 12 wk | 96 pts MCI | Vital signs, cardiac safety, neuropsychological performance, safety clinical laboratory parameters | sCD40L and TNFα in CSF inversely related to CHF5074 dose. Plasma levels of sCD40L with 600 mg/day significantly lower. Positive dose–response trend was found on executive function in APOE4 | [ |
| MAPKα | |||||
| Neflamapimod (VX745) | NA | Cytokines, Aβ, phospho-tau, neurofilament light chain and butyrylcholinesterase in CFS, and fludeoxyglucose PET | Treatment effects on immediate and delayed recall aspects of episodic memory | ||
| Other agents | |||||
| PRE 20 mg od for 4 wk, maintenance dose 10 mg od vs. PL | Phase II, ran 1:1, 1 year | 138 pts AD | ADAS-cog | No change in ADAS-cog score | [ |
| HYD 200–400 mg od by body weight vs. PL | Phase II, ran 1:1, 18 mo | 168 pts mild AD | ADL, cognitive function, behavioral abnormalities | Any specific subgroup benefited from hydroxychloroquine | [ |
| SIM up to 80 mg as tolerated vs. PL | Pilot study, ran 1:1, 26 wk | 44 pts AD | CSF biomarkers Aβ1–40 and Aβ1–42 | Significantly decreased Aβ1–40 in mild AD | [ |
| ATO 80 mg od vs. PL | Pilot study, ran 1:1, 1 y | 67 pts mild AD | ADAS-cog, CGI LOCF analysis | Significant change in the scales | [ |
| ATO 80 mg od vs. PL | Phase III, ran 1:1, 72 wk | 640 pts mild-to moderate AD (MMSE 13–25) | ADAS-cog, CGI (co-primaries) | Not associated with significant clinical benefit | [ |
| IV Ig 0.2 or 0.4 g/kg q2w vs. PL | Phase III, ran 1:1, 18 mo | 390 subjects mild to moderate AD | ADCS-AD | No beneficial effects | [ |
| TRI 900 mg od vs. PL | Phase II, ran 1:1, 18 mo | 257 amnestic MCI | ADAS-cog, conversion to dementia | Significantly lower rate of conversion to dementia | [ |
| OFA 2.3 g | Pilot study, ran 1:1, 6 mo | 35 pts mild AD | sIL-1RII and Aβ1–42 in CSF | Influence on inflammatory or biomarkers in CSF or plasma | [ |
| CIL 100 mg od vs. control (ASA 100 mg or CLO 50–75 mg od) | Pilot study, ran 1:1, 6 mo | 20 pts AD and CVD | ADAS-cog, Wechsler Memory Scale, TMT-A | Preventive effect on cognitive decline | [ |
| HG-CSF 5-day schedule vs. PL | Pilot (proof-of-concept) study, ran 1:1, cross-over design | 8 pts mild to moderate AD | CANTAB computerized system | Positive change in hippocampal-dependent task of cognitive performance | [ |
| RES 500 mg od (escalation by 500 mg increments q13w, ending with 1000 mg bid) | Phase II, ran 1:1 52-wk | 119 pts mild-to moderate AD | Aβ1–40 biomarkers in CSF and serum, brain volume | CSF Aβ40 and plasma Aβ40 levels declined more with PL; brain volume loss increased | [ |
Aß amyloid beta, AD Alzheimer’s disease, ADAPT Alzheimer’s Disease Anti-inflammatory, ADAS-cog Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive portion, ADCS-AD Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study-Activities of Daily Living Inventory, ADL activities of daily living, AE adverse effect, ASA acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin), ATO atorvastatin, bid twice daily, CDR Clinical Dementia Rating, CGI Clinical Global Impression, CIBIC-+ Clinician’s Interview-Based Impression of Change Plus Caregiver Input, CIL cilostazol, CLO clopidogrel, CVD cardiovascular, DON donepezil, ETA etanercept, HG-CSF human granulocyte colony-stimulating-factor, HYD hydroxychloroquine, Ig immunoglobulin, ITA itanapraced, ITT intention-to-treat, IV intravenous, LOCF last observation carried forward, MAPK mitogen-activated protein kinase, MCI mild cognitive impairment, MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination, mo months, od once daily, OFA omega-3 fatty acids, ol open-label, ow once weekly, pg parallel-group, PIO pioglitazone, PL placebo, PPAR peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor, PRE prednisone, pro prospective, pt(s) patient(s), qxw every x weeks, ran randomized, rCBF regional cerebral blood flow, RES resveratrol, RSG XR rosiglitazone extended release, SC subcutaneous, SIB Severe Impairment Battery, SIM simvastatin, TMT Trail Making Test, TNF tumor necrosis factor, TRI triflusal, Vit. vitamin, wk weeks, WMS-LM-II Logical Memory I and II from the Wechsler Memory Scale-Abbreviated, y year
Adapted from Heneka et al [396] with permission
| Neuroinflammation plays an important part in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), with both positive and negative consequences. |
| Induction of inflammatory signaling pathways leads to the production and release of immune mediators, which ultimately compromises neuronal function and causes cell death. |
| Anti-inflammatory therapeutic approaches to modify AD progression are the basis for ongoing and future therapeutic trials in this area. |