Parks Anna L, Thacker Ayush, Dohan Daniel, Gomez Liliana A Ramirez, Ritchie Christine S, Paladino Joanna, Shah Sachin J
Division of Hematology and Hematologic Malignancies, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Massachusetts General Hospital, Mongan Institute Center for Aging and Serious Illness, Boston, MA, USA.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2025 May;105(2):494-504. doi: 10.1177/13872877251329519. Epub 2025 Apr 10.
BackgroundPeople with Alzheimer's disease (AD) now have access to disease-modifying treatment with anti-amyloid monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). Their perception of risks and benefits and approach to treatment decisions remain unknown.ObjectiveWe aimed to understand how people with AD weigh the benefits and costs of anti amyloid mAbs and incorporate these into decisions about treatment.MethodsWe conducted semi-structured interviews with people with biomarker- or imaging-confirmed AD and mild or moderate cognitive impairment who were seen at memory care clinics and discussed lecanemab with a clinician. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and deidentified. Thematic analysis identified themes and subthemes.ResultsAmong 22 participants (mean age 70, 8 [36%] women, 22 [100%] White), analysis revealed 3 major themes and associated subthemes: (1) People with AD sought and obtained information from different sources-advocacy organizations, the Internet, and clinicians; (2) Hopes, expected benefits, and the existential threat of dementia drove willingness and readiness to start lecanemab; (3) Individual traits, family factors, and degree of trust in expertise influenced how people balanced risks and benefits. Some would accept treatment at any cost; others carefully weighed risks and burdens, but were motivated by supportive families, insurance coverage, and trust in expertise; for a few, costs decidedly outweighed their personal benefits. People with AD desired more individualized information and to hear more from patients who took the medication.ConclusionsResults from this first qualitative study of people with AD considering treatment with anti-amyloid mAbs can inform clinician, health system and policy efforts to individualize decisions.
背景
阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者现在可以使用抗淀粉样蛋白单克隆抗体(mAbs)进行疾病修饰治疗。他们对风险和益处的认知以及治疗决策方式仍不明确。
目的
我们旨在了解AD患者如何权衡抗淀粉样蛋白mAbs的益处和成本,并将这些因素纳入治疗决策。
方法
我们对在记忆护理诊所就诊且生物标志物或影像学确诊为AD以及轻度或中度认知障碍、并与临床医生讨论过lecanemab的患者进行了半结构化访谈。访谈进行了录音、转录并去除了身份信息。主题分析确定了主题和子主题。
结果
在22名参与者中(平均年龄70岁,8名[36%]女性,22名[100%]白人),分析揭示了3个主要主题及相关子主题:(1)AD患者从不同来源——倡导组织、互联网和临床医生那里寻求并获取信息;(2)希望、预期益处以及痴呆症的生存威胁促使患者愿意并准备好开始使用lecanemab;(3)个人特质、家庭因素以及对专业知识的信任程度影响了人们平衡风险和益处的方式。一些人会不惜一切代价接受治疗;另一些人则仔细权衡风险和负担,但受到支持性家庭、保险覆盖范围以及对专业知识的信任的激励;对少数人来说,成本明显超过了个人益处。AD患者希望获得更个性化的信息,并更多地听取服用该药物的患者的意见。
结论
这项关于考虑使用抗淀粉样蛋白mAbs治疗的AD患者的首次定性研究结果可为临床医生、卫生系统和政策制定者进行个性化决策提供参考。