Wild R, Pettit T, Burns A
Trafford General Hospital, Moorside Unit, Moorside Road, Davyhulme, Manchester, UK, M41 5SL.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2003;2003(3):CD003672. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003672.
Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) was first described in 1983, and clinical diagnostic criteria were published in the early to mid 1990s. It has been suggested DLB may account for up to 15-25% of cases of dementia among people aged over 65, although autopsy suggests much lower rates. Characteristic symptoms are dementia, marked fluctuation of cognitive ability, early and persistent visual hallucinations and spontaneous motor features of Parkinsonism. Falls, syncope, transient disturbances of consciousness, neuroleptic sensitivity, and hallucinations in other modalities are also common. This combination of features can be difficult to manage as neuroleptics can make the Parkinsonian and cognitive symptoms worse. There is evidence to suggest that the cholinesterase inhibitors may be beneficial in this disorder; small case series indicate that cholinesterase inhibitors are safe, and will improve both cognitive deficits and neuropsychiatric symptoms in DLB.
To assess the use of cholinesterase inhibitors in DLB.
The trials were identified from a search of the Specialized Register of the Cochrane Dementia and Cognitive Improvement Group on 25 February 2002 using the terms 'lewy body', 'Lewy bodies' and 'Lewy'. This register contains records from all major health care databases and trial databases and is updated regularly.
Randomized, double-blind trials in which treatment with cholinesterase inhibitors was administered and compared with alternative interventions in patients with DLB are included.
Two reviewers (TP, RW) independently assessed quality of trials according to criteria described in the Cochrane Collaboration Handbook. Each drug was to be examined separately, and together as a group. We also analysed data by time to outcome measurement; short-term (up to one month), medium term (one month up to six months) and long term (Six months and longer). The primary outcome measures of interest are in the following areas: neuropsychiatric features. i.e. psychiatric symptoms and behavioural disturbances, cognitive function, activities of daily living, global assessments, quality of life, including maintaining role and social functioning, effect on carers, safety as measured by incidence of adverse events and side effects, acceptability of treatment as measured by withdrawal from trials, and by patient/carer assessment, institutionalization and death.
There was one included trial (McKeith 2000f) of rivastigmine compared with placebo on 120 patients. Neuropsychiatric InventoryThe 10-item test found no significant difference between the two groups in change of scores from baseline using intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis at 20 weeks and last observation carried forward (LOCF) analysis. The treatment effect was statistically significant in favour of rivastigmine if only observed cases (OC) were analysed (WMD -6.94, 95% CI -11.59 to -2.29, P=0.003). There were similar results for the NPI-4, with only the OC analysis showing a significant superiority of rivastigmine to placebo at 20 weeks (WMD -3.75, 95%CI -6.62 to -0.88, P=0.01).MMSE:Analysis of these results showed no statistically significant difference between the two groups at 20 weeks.CGC-plus:Analysis of the proportion of patients who had no change or became worse found no statistically significant difference between the two groups at 20 weeks for the ITT, LOCK and OC analyses. Adverse Events:The placebo group experienced significantly fewer adverse events than the treatment group (54/59 vs 46/61,OR 3.52, 95%CI 1.19 to 10.43). However, using ITT analysis of 20-week data, there was no significant difference between the two groups when serious adverse events were considered. There were no significant differences in death rates between the two groups at 20 weeks.Drop-out Rates:Analysis of these results showed no difference between the two groups at 20 weeks using ITT analysis.
REVIEWER'S CONCLUSIONS: Patients with dementia with Lewy bodies who suffer from behavioural disturbance oS CONCLUSIONS: Patients with dementia with Lewy bodies who suffer from behavioural disturbance or psychiatric problems may benefit from rivastigmine if they tolerate it, but the evidence is weak. Further trials using rivastigmine are needed, as are trials of other cholinesterase inhibitors in dementia with Lewy bodies.
路易体痴呆(DLB)于1983年首次被描述,其临床诊断标准于20世纪90年代初至中期公布。有人提出,DLB可能占65岁以上人群痴呆病例的15% - 25%,尽管尸检显示比例要低得多。其特征性症状包括痴呆、认知能力显著波动、早期且持续的视幻觉以及帕金森病的自发运动特征。跌倒、晕厥、短暂意识障碍、对神经安定药物敏感以及其他形式的幻觉也很常见。由于神经安定药物会使帕金森病症状和认知症状恶化,这些特征的组合可能难以处理。有证据表明胆碱酯酶抑制剂可能对这种疾病有益;小样本病例系列表明胆碱酯酶抑制剂是安全的,并且会改善DLB患者的认知缺陷和神经精神症状。
评估胆碱酯酶抑制剂在DLB中的应用。
通过2002年2月25日检索Cochrane痴呆与认知改善小组专业注册库来识别试验,检索词为“路易体”“路易小体”和“路易”。该注册库包含所有主要医疗保健数据库和试验数据库的记录,并定期更新。
纳入使用胆碱酯酶抑制剂进行治疗并与DLB患者的其他干预措施进行比较的随机、双盲试验。
两名综述作者(TP,RW)根据Cochrane协作网手册中描述的标准独立评估试验质量。每种药物将分别进行检查,并作为一组进行综合检查。我们还按结局测量时间进行数据分析;短期(长达1个月)、中期(1个月至6个月)和长期(6个月及更长时间)。感兴趣的主要结局指标在以下几个方面:神经精神特征,即精神症状和行为障碍、认知功能、日常生活活动、整体评估、生活质量,包括维持角色和社会功能、对照料者的影响、以不良事件和副作用发生率衡量的安全性、以退出试验情况以及患者/照料者评估衡量的治疗可接受性、机构收容和死亡情况。
有一项纳入120例患者的试验(McKeith 2000f),比较了卡巴拉汀与安慰剂。神经精神科问卷10项测试在20周时采用意向性分析(ITT)和末次观察结转(LOCF)分析,发现两组从基线开始的得分变化无显著差异。如果仅分析观察病例(OC),治疗效果在统计学上显著有利于卡巴拉汀(加权均数差 - 6.94,95%置信区间 - 11.59至 - 2.29,P = 0.003)。NPI - 4也有类似结果,仅OC分析显示在20周时卡巴拉汀比安慰剂有显著优势(加权均数差 - 3.75,95%置信区间 - 6.62至 - 0.88,P = 0.01)。简易精神状态检查表:对这些结果的分析显示两组在20周时无统计学显著差异。综合老年评定量表加项:对无变化或病情恶化患者比例的分析在20周时采用ITT、锁定和OC分析,两组间无统计学显著差异。不良事件:安慰剂组经历的不良事件明显少于治疗组(54/59对46/61,比值比3.52,95%置信区间1.19至10.43)。然而,使用20周数据的ITT分析,考虑严重不良事件时两组间无显著差异。两组在20周时死亡率无显著差异。退出率:对这些结果的分析显示在20周时采用ITT分析两组间无差异。
患有行为障碍或精神问题的路易体痴呆患者如果能够耐受,可能从卡巴拉汀中获益,但证据薄弱。需要进一步开展使用卡巴拉汀的试验,以及在路易体痴呆中使用其他胆碱酯酶抑制剂的试验。