Farlow M R, Hake A, Messina J, Hartman R, Veach J, Anand R
Department of Neurology, Indiana University School of Medicine, CL583, 541 Clinical Dr., Indianapolis, IN 46202-5111, USA.
Arch Neurol. 2001 Mar;58(3):417-22. doi: 10.1001/archneur.58.3.417.
Evidence suggests that disease severity predicts the response of patients with Alzheimer disease (AD) to cholinesterase inhibitor treatment, raising the question of whether disease progression also predicts response to this treatment.
To evaluate retrospectively whether rate of disease progression during placebo treatment affects response to subsequent rivastigmine tartrate therapy for patients with mild to moderately severe AD.
A 26-week, open-label extension study following a 26-week, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial.
Outpatient research centers at 22 sites in the United States.
We studied 187 of 235 patients originally randomized to receive placebo treatment in the double-blind phase of the trial who continued with open-label (rivastigmine) extension therapy.
Placebo treatment for 26 weeks followed by rivastigmine treatment, 2 to 12 mg/d, for 26 weeks.
Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive subscale (ADAS-Cog), Progressive Deterioration Scale, Mini-Mental State Examination, and Global Deterioration Scale scores.
Rivastigmine administration during open-label extension therapy benefited patients who had progressed slowly and those who had progressed rapidly during initial double-blind placebo treatment. Slowly progressive patients responded with a mean 1.03-point improvement in the week 26 (ie, start of open-label rivastigmine treatment) ADAS-Cog score at 12 weeks of rivastigmine treatment (week 38 of treatment; P =.02 vs week 26). However, more rapidly progressive patients had a significantly larger mean 4.97-point improvement from the week 26 ADAS-Cog score at 12 weeks (with respect to week 26 of treatment and slowly progressive patient scores, P<.001 for both). Thus, a more rapid disease progression rate while receiving placebo treatment was predictive of a significantly stronger patient response to rivastigmine therapy. This relation also was observed with the other 3 outcome measures and was still apparent when accounting for disease severity.
Rate of disease progression for patients with mild to moderate AD seems to predict response to rivastigmine treatment. Patients with more rapidly progressive disease might be particularly likely to benefit from rivastigmine therapy.
有证据表明,疾病严重程度可预测阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者对胆碱酯酶抑制剂治疗的反应,这就提出了疾病进展是否也能预测这种治疗反应的问题。
回顾性评估在安慰剂治疗期间疾病进展速度是否会影响轻度至中度严重AD患者对后续酒石酸卡巴拉汀治疗的反应。
一项为期26周的开放标签扩展研究,该研究接续一项为期26周的双盲、随机、安慰剂对照试验。
美国22个地点的门诊研究中心。
我们研究了最初在试验双盲阶段随机接受安慰剂治疗且继续接受开放标签(卡巴拉汀)扩展治疗的235名患者中的187名。
先进行26周的安慰剂治疗,然后进行26周的卡巴拉汀治疗,剂量为2至12毫克/天。
阿尔茨海默病评估量表认知分量表(ADAS-Cog)、进行性恶化量表、简易精神状态检查和总体衰退量表评分。
在开放标签扩展治疗期间给予卡巴拉汀治疗,使在最初双盲安慰剂治疗期间进展缓慢和进展迅速的患者均受益。进展缓慢的患者在卡巴拉汀治疗12周时(治疗第38周),ADAS-Cog评分在第26周(即开放标签卡巴拉汀治疗开始时)平均改善1.03分(P = 0.02,与第26周相比)。然而,进展较快的患者在12周时从第26周ADAS-Cog评分改善更为显著,平均改善4.97分(相对于治疗第26周和进展缓慢患者的评分,两者P均<0.001)。因此,接受安慰剂治疗时疾病进展速度较快预示着患者对卡巴拉汀治疗的反应明显更强。在其他3项观察指标中也观察到了这种关系,并且在考虑疾病严重程度时这种关系仍然明显。
轻度至中度AD患者的疾病进展速度似乎可预测对卡巴拉汀治疗的反应。疾病进展较快的患者可能尤其可能从卡巴拉汀治疗中受益。