Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
J Clin Psychiatry. 2013 Aug;74(8):810-6. doi: 10.4088/JCP.12m08099.
In a recent crossover trial, methylphenidate treatment decreased apathy in Alzheimer's disease. We further assessed this finding in the Apathy in Dementia Methylphenidate Trial (ADMET).
Six-week, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled multicenter trial enrolling Alzheimer's disease participants (NINCDS-ADRDA criteria) with apathy assigned to methylphenidate 20 mg daily or placebo, conducted from June 2010 to December 2011. Primary outcomes were change in Apathy Evaluation Scale (AES) score and modified Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study-Clinical Global Impression of Change (ADCS-CGI-C). Secondary outcomes included change in Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) apathy score, Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score, and safety.
60 participants were randomly assigned (29 methylphenidate, 31 placebo). At baseline, mean (SD) age = 76 (8) years, MMSE score = 20 (5), AES score = 51 (12), NPI total score = 16 (8), and 62% of the participants (n = 37) were female. After 6 weeks' treatment, mean (SD) change in AES score was -1.9 (1.5) for methylphenidate and 0.6 (1.4) for placebo (P = .23). Odds ratio for improvement in ADCS-CGI-C was 3.7 (95% CI, 1.3 to 10.8) (P = .02), with 21% of methylphenidate versus 3% of placebo rated as moderately or markedly improved. NPI apathy score improvement was 1.8 points (95% CI, 0.3 to 3.4) greater on methylphenidate than on placebo (P = .02). MMSE trended toward improvement on methylphenidate (P = .06). There were trends toward greater anxiety and weight loss > 2% in the methylphenidate-treated group.
Methylphenidate treatment of apathy in Alzheimer's disease was associated with significant improvement in 2 of 3 efficacy outcomes and a trend toward improved global cognition with minimal adverse events, supporting the safety and efficacy of methylphenidate treatment for apathy in Alzheimer's disease.
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01117181.
在最近的一项交叉试验中,哌醋甲酯治疗可减轻阿尔茨海默病患者的淡漠症状。我们在阿兹海默病的哌醋甲酯治疗淡漠症试验(ADMET)中进一步评估了这一发现。
这是一项为期 6 周的随机、双盲、安慰剂对照的多中心试验,纳入了患有淡漠症状的阿尔茨海默病患者(NINCDS-ADRDA 标准),患者被随机分配接受每日 20mg 哌醋甲酯或安慰剂治疗,试验于 2010 年 6 月至 2011 年 12 月进行。主要结局指标为淡漠评估量表(AES)评分和改良阿尔茨海默病合作研究-临床总体印象变化量表(ADCS-CGI-C)的变化。次要结局指标包括神经精神问卷(NPI)淡漠评分、简易精神状态检查(MMSE)评分和安全性的变化。
60 名参与者被随机分配(29 名哌醋甲酯,31 名安慰剂)。基线时,平均(SD)年龄=76(8)岁,MMSE 评分为 20(5),AES 评分为 51(12),NPI 总分为 16(8),62%的参与者(n=37)为女性。经过 6 周的治疗,哌醋甲酯组 AES 评分的平均(SD)变化为-1.9(1.5),安慰剂组为 0.6(1.4)(P=0.23)。ADCS-CGI-C 改善的优势比为 3.7(95%可信区间,1.3 至 10.8)(P=0.02),哌醋甲酯组 21%的患者和安慰剂组 3%的患者被评为中度或明显改善。哌醋甲酯组 NPI 淡漠评分改善 1.8 分(95%可信区间,0.3 至 3.4),优于安慰剂组(P=0.02)。MMSE 评分在哌醋甲酯组有改善的趋势(P=0.06)。哌醋甲酯组有更大的焦虑和体重减轻(>2%)的趋势。
哌醋甲酯治疗阿尔茨海默病患者的淡漠症状与 3 项疗效结局中的 2 项显著改善相关,与最小的不良反应相关,提示哌醋甲酯治疗阿尔茨海默病淡漠症的安全性和有效性。
ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT01117181。