Treatment of Alzheimer's Disease
What drugs are currently available to treat Alzheimer's Disease?
No treatment can stop Alzheimer's Disease. However, for some people in the early
and middle stages of the disease, the drugs tacrine (Cognex®),
donepezil (Aricept®), rivastigmine (Exelon®), or galantamine
(Razadyne®, formerly known as Reminyl®) may help prevent
some symptoms from becoming worse for a limited time. Another drug,
memantine (Namenda®), has been approved to treat moderate to
severe Alzheimer's Disease, although it also is limited in its effects.
Also, some medicines may help control behavioral symptoms of Alzheimer's Disease
such as sleeplessness, agitation, wandering, anxiety, and depression.
Treating these symptoms often makes patients more comfortable and
makes their care easier for caregivers.
What potential new treatments are being researched?
The National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the National Institutes
of Health (NIH), is the lead Federal agency for Alzheimer's Disease research. NIA-supported
scientists are testing a number of drugs to see if they prevent
Alzheimer's Disease, slow the disease, or help reduce symptoms. Some ideas that seem
promising turn out to have little or no benefit when they are carefully
studied in a clinical trial. Researchers undertake clinical trials
to learn whether treatments that appear promising in observational
and animal studies actually are safe and effective in people.
Mild Cognitive Impairment: During the past several
years, scientists have focused on a type of memory change called
mild cognitive impairment (MCI), which is different from both Alzheimer's Disease
and normal age-related memory change. People with MCI have ongoing
memory problems, but they do not have other losses such as confusion,
attention problems, and difficulty with language. The NIA-funded
Memory Impairment Study compared donepezil (Aricept), vitamin E,
or placebo in participants with MCI to see whether the drugs might
delay or prevent progression to Alzheimer's Disease. The study found that the group
with MCI taking the drug donepezil were at reduced risk of progressing
to Alzheimer's Disease for the first 18 months of a 3-year study when compared with
their counterparts on placebo. The reduced risk of progressing from
MCI to a diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease among participants on donepezil disappeared
after 18 months, and by the end of the study, the probability of
progressing to Alzheimer's Disease was the same in the two groups. Vitamin E had
no effect at any time point in the study when compared with placebo.
Neuroimaging: Scientists are finding that damage
to parts of the brain involved in memory, such as the hippocampus,
can sometimes be seen on brain scans before symptoms of the disease
occur. An NIA public-private partnership—the
Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI)—is a large study that will
determine whether magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron
emission tomography (PET) scans, or other imaging or biological
markers, can see early Alzheimer's Disease changes or measure disease progression.
The project is designed to help speed clinical trials and find new
ways to determine the effectiveness of treatments.
Alzheimer's Disease Genetics: The NIA is sponsoring the Alzheimer's Disease Genetics
Study to learn more about risk factor genes for late onset Alzheimer's Disease. To
participate in this study, families with two or more living siblings
diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease should contact the National Cell Repository for
Alzheimer's Disease (NCRAD) toll-free at 1-800-526-2839. Information may also be
requested through the study’s website: http://ncrad.iu.edu.
Inflammation: There is evidence that inflammation
in the brain may contribute to Alzheimer's Disease damage. Some studies have suggested
that drugs such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
might help slow the progression of Alzheimer's Disease, but clinical trials thus
far have not demonstrated a benefit from these drugs. A clinical
trial studying two of these drugs, rofecoxib (Vioxx) and naproxen
(Aleve) showed that they did not delay the progression of Alzheimer's Disease in
people who already have the disease. Another trial, testing whether
the NSAIDs celecoxib (Celebrex) and naproxen could prevent Alzheimer's Disease in
healthy older people at risk of the disease, has been suspended.
However, investigators are continuing to follow the participants
and are examining data regarding possible cardiovascular risk. Researchers
are continuing to look for ways to test how other anti-inflammatory
drugs might affect the development or progression of Alzheimer's Disease.
Antioxidants: Several years ago, a clinical trial
showed that vitamin E slowed the progress of some consequences of
Alzheimer's Disease by about 7 months. Additional studies are investigating whether
antioxidants—vitamins E and C—can slow Alzheimer's Disease. Another clinical
trial is examining whether vitamin E and/or selenium supplements
can prevent Alzheimer's Disease or cognitive decline, and additional studies on other
antioxidants are ongoing or being planned.
Ginkgo biloba: Early studies suggested that extracts
from the leaves of the ginkgo biloba tree may be of some help in
treating Alzheimer's Disease symptoms. There is no evidence yet that ginkgo biloba
will cure or prevent Alzheimer's Disease, but scientists now are trying to find out
in a clinical trial whether ginkgo biloba can delay cognitive decline
or prevent dementia in older people.
Estrogen: Some studies have suggested that estrogen
used by women to treat the symptoms of menopause also protects the
brain. Experts also wondered whether using estrogen could reduce
the risk of Alzheimer's Disease or slow the disease. Clinical trials to test estrogen,
however, have not shown that estrogen can slow the progression of
already diagnosed Alzheimer's Disease. And one study found that women over the age
of 65 who used estrogen with a progestin were at greater risk of
dementia, including Alzheimer's Disease, and that older women using only estrogen
could also increase their chance of developing dementia.
Scientists believe that more research is needed to find out if
estrogen may play some role in Alzheimer's Disease. They would like to know whether
starting estrogen therapy around the time of menopause, rather than
at age 65 or older, will protect memory or prevent Alzheimer's Disease.
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