Wattmo Carina, Londos Elisabet, Minthon Lennart
BMC Neurol. 2014 Sep 10;14:173. doi: 10.1186/s12883-014-0173-4.
A varying response to cholinesterase inhibitor (ChEI) treatment has been reported among patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Whether the individual-specific response, specific ChEI agent or dose affects mortality is unclear. We aimed to examine the relationship between the 6-month response to ChEI and lifespan.
Six hundred and eighty-one deceased patients with a clinical AD diagnosis and a Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score of 10-26 at the start of ChEI therapy (baseline) were included in a prospective, observational, multicentre study in clinical practice. At baseline and after 6 months of treatment, the participants were assessed using the MMSE, the Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive subscale (ADAS-cog), the Clinician's Interview-Based Impression of Change (CIBIC), the Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) scale, and the Physical Self-Maintenance Scale (PSMS). The individuals' socio-demographic characteristics, ChEI dose, and date of death were recorded. Responses to ChEI and the association of possible risk factors with survival were analysed using general linear models.
A longer lifespan (mean of 0.5 years) was observed among the improved/unchanged patients, as measured by MMSE or CIBIC score, but not by ADAS-cog score, after 6 months of ChEI therapy. In the multivariate models, increased survival time was independently related to a better 6-month response in MMSE, CIBIC, IADL, and PSMS scores, female sex, no antihypertensive/cardiac or antidiabetic therapy, younger age, lower education, milder disease stage at baseline, and higher ChEI dose. Apolipoprotein E genotype did not affect mortality significantly. The patients who received a higher ChEI dose during the first 6 months had a mean lifespan after baseline that was 15 months longer than that of those who received a lower dose.
A better short-term response to ChEI might prolong survival in naturalistic AD patients. In individuals who received and tolerated higher ChEI doses, a longer lifespan can be expected.
据报道,阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者对胆碱酯酶抑制剂(ChEI)治疗的反应各不相同。个体特异性反应、特定的ChEI药物或剂量是否会影响死亡率尚不清楚。我们旨在研究ChEI治疗6个月的反应与寿命之间的关系。
681例临床诊断为AD且在ChEI治疗开始时(基线)简易精神状态检查表(MMSE)评分在10-26分之间的已故患者纳入一项临床实践中的前瞻性、观察性、多中心研究。在基线和治疗6个月后,使用MMSE、阿尔茨海默病评估量表认知分量表(ADAS-cog)、临床医生基于访谈的变化印象(CIBIC)、日常生活活动能力量表(IADL)和身体自我维持量表(PSMS)对参与者进行评估。记录个体的社会人口学特征、ChEI剂量和死亡日期。使用一般线性模型分析对ChEI的反应以及可能的危险因素与生存的关联。
ChEI治疗6个月后,通过MMSE或CIBIC评分衡量,改善/未改变的患者寿命更长(平均0.5年),但ADAS-cog评分未显示此结果。在多变量模型中,生存时间延长与MMSE、CIBIC、IADL和PSMS评分6个月时更好的反应、女性、未接受抗高血压/心脏病或抗糖尿病治疗、年龄较小、教育程度较低、基线时疾病阶段较轻以及ChEI剂量较高独立相关。载脂蛋白E基因型对死亡率无显著影响。在最初6个月接受较高ChEI剂量的患者,基线后的平均寿命比接受较低剂量的患者长15个月。
对ChEI更好的短期反应可能会延长AD自然病程患者的生存期。在接受并耐受较高ChEI剂量的个体中,可以预期寿命更长。