Blasko Imrich, Jungwirth Susanne, Jellinger Kurt, Kemmler Georg, Krampla Wolfgang, Weissgram Silvia, Wichart Ildiko, Tragl Karl Heinz, Hinterhuber Hartmann, Fischer Peter
Department of Psychiatry, Innsbruck Medical University, Anichstrasse 35, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria.
J Psychiatr Res. 2008 Sep;42(11):946-55. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2007.10.010. Epub 2007 Dec 21.
In the course of cognitive deterioration leading to Alzheimer's disease (AD) the increase of amyloid beta (Abeta42) in cerebrospinal fluid or plasma might be an initial event. We previously reported about the associations between concomitant medication and plasma Abeta42 levels in the non-demented population cohort of the Vienna transdanube aging study at baseline. In the present study, the longitudinal influence of insulin, gingko biloba, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), oral anti-diabetics (sulfonylurea and biguanides), estrogens, fibrates, and statins on plasma Abeta42 are presented. Associated with medial temporal lobe atrophy (MTA), users of insulin showed significantly increased levels of Abeta42. Long-term users of gingko biloba, independent of their MTA, had significantly decreased plasma Abeta42 and the age-dependent increase of plasma Abeta42 was significantly smaller in long-term gingko biloba treated subjects. The use of fibrates also decreased plasma Abeta42 levels. In multiple testing considering interactions between medications, gender, APOE-epsilon4 presence and creatinine, insulin long-term users again showed significantly increased levels; fibrate and gingko biloba users showed a trend to rather decreased plasma Abeta42 levels compared to the non-users (p=0.05-0.08). Neither statins nor NSAIDs showed a significant effect on plasma Abeta42 in this model. Measuring the effect on cognition, no single medication studied was a significant predictor of conversion to AD or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Whether the use of gingko biloba might prevent the conversion to MCI or AD needs to be proven in prospective, clinical trials.
在导致阿尔茨海默病(AD)的认知衰退过程中,脑脊液或血浆中β淀粉样蛋白(Aβ42)的增加可能是一个初始事件。我们之前曾报道过维也纳多瑙河老龄研究非痴呆人群队列在基线时伴随用药与血浆Aβ42水平之间的关联。在本研究中,呈现了胰岛素、银杏叶、非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs)、口服抗糖尿病药物(磺脲类和双胍类)、雌激素、贝特类药物和他汀类药物对血浆Aβ42的纵向影响。与内侧颞叶萎缩(MTA)相关,胰岛素使用者的Aβ42水平显著升高。银杏叶长期使用者,无论其MTA情况如何,血浆Aβ42显著降低,且在接受银杏叶长期治疗的受试者中,血浆Aβ42随年龄增长的增加显著较小。使用贝特类药物也降低了血浆Aβ42水平。在考虑药物、性别、APOE-ε4存在情况和肌酐之间相互作用的多重检验中,胰岛素长期使用者的水平再次显著升高;与未使用者相比,贝特类药物和银杏叶使用者的血浆Aβ42水平有降低的趋势(p = 0.05 - 0.08)。在该模型中,他汀类药物和NSAIDs对血浆Aβ42均未显示出显著影响。在测量对认知的影响时,所研究的单一药物均不是向AD或轻度认知障碍(MCI)转化的显著预测因素。银杏叶的使用是否能预防向MCI或AD的转化需要在前瞻性临床试验中得到证实。