posted on 2009-12-08, 16:08authored byR. J. Howard, E. Juszczak, C. G. Ballard, P. Bentham, R. G. Brown, R. Bullock, A. S. Burns, C. Holmes, R. Jacoby, Toby Johnson, M. Knapp, James Lindesay, J. T. O Brien, G. Wilcock, C. Katona, R. W. Jones, J. DeCesare, Rodger M., CALM-AD Trial Group
Background
Agitation is a common and distressing symptom in patients with Alzheimer’s disease.
Cholinesterase inhibitors improve cognitive outcomes in such patients, but the
benefits of these drugs for behavioral disturbances are unclear.
Methods
We randomly assigned 272 patients with Alzheimer’s disease who had clinically significant
agitation and no response to a brief psychosocial treatment program to receive
10 mg of donepezil per day (128 patients) or placebo (131 patients) for 12 weeks.
The primary outcome was a change in the score on the Cohen–Mansfield Agitation
Inventory (CMAI) (on a scale of 29 to 203, with higher scores indicating more agitation)
at 12 weeks.
Results
There was no significant difference between the effects of donepezil and those of placebo
on the basis of the change in CMAI scores from baseline to 12 weeks (estimated
mean difference in change [the value for donepezil minus that for placebo], −0.06;
95% confidence interval [CI], −4.35 to 4.22). Twenty-two of 108 patients (20.4%) in the
placebo group and 22 of 113 (19.5%) in the donepezil group had a reduction of 30%
or greater in the CMAI score (the value for donepezil minus that for placebo, −0.9 percentage
point; 95% CI, −11.4 to 9.6). There were also no significant differences between
the placebo and donepezil groups in scores for the Neuropsychiatric Inventory,
the Neuropsychiatric Inventory Caregiver Distress Scale, or the Clinician’s Global
Impression of Change.
Conclusions
In this 12-week trial, donepezil was not more effective than placebo in treating agitation
in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00142324.)
History
Citation
New England Journal of Medicine, 2007, 357 (14), pp.1382-1392