Benefits and Harms of Prescription Drugs and Supplements for Treatment of Clinical Alzheimer-Type Dementia.

Adverse events Adverse reactions Cholinesterase inhibitors Clinical trial reporting Cognition Dementia Drug synthesis Drugs Psychoses Research design

Journal

Annals of internal medicine
ISSN: 1539-3704
Titre abrégé: Ann Intern Med
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0372351

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
19 05 2020
Historique:
pubmed: 28 4 2020
medline: 2 9 2020
entrez: 28 4 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Effects of drug treatment of clinical Alzheimer-type dementia (CATD) are uncertain. To summarize evidence on the effects of prescription drugs and supplements for CATD treatment. Electronic bibliographic databases (inception to November 2019), ClinicalTrials.gov (to November 2019), and systematic review bibliographies. English-language trials of prescription drug and supplement treatment in older adults with CATD that report cognition, function, global measures, behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD), or harms. Minimum treatment was 24 weeks (≥2 weeks for selected BPSD). Studies with low or medium risk of bias (ROB) were analyzed. Two reviewers rated ROB. One reviewer extracted data; another verified extraction accuracy. Fifty-five studies reporting non-BPSD outcomes (most ≤26 weeks) and 12 reporting BPSD (most ≤12 weeks) were analyzed. Across CATD severity, mostly low-strength evidence suggested that, compared with placebo, cholinesterase inhibitors produced small average improvements in cognition (median standardized mean difference [SMD], 0.30 [range, 0.24 to 0.52]), no difference to small improvement in function (median SMD, 0.19 [range, -0.10 to 0.22]), no difference in the likelihood of at least moderate improvement in global clinical impression (median absolute risk difference, 4% [range, 2% to 4%]), and increased withdrawals due to adverse events. In adults with moderate to severe CATD receiving cholinesterase inhibitors, low- to insufficient-strength evidence suggested that, compared with placebo, add-on memantine inconsistently improved cognition and improved global clinical impression but not function. Evidence was mostly insufficient about prescription drugs for BPSD and about supplements for all outcomes. Most drugs had few trials without high ROB, especially for supplements, active drug comparisons, BPSD, and longer trials. Cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine slightly reduced short-term cognitive decline, and cholinesterase inhibitors slightly reduced reported functional decline, but differences versus placebo were of uncertain clinical importance. Evidence was mostly insufficient on drug treatment of BPSD and on supplements for all outcomes. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. (PROSPERO: CRD42018117897).

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND
Effects of drug treatment of clinical Alzheimer-type dementia (CATD) are uncertain.
PURPOSE
To summarize evidence on the effects of prescription drugs and supplements for CATD treatment.
DATA SOURCES
Electronic bibliographic databases (inception to November 2019), ClinicalTrials.gov (to November 2019), and systematic review bibliographies.
STUDY SELECTION
English-language trials of prescription drug and supplement treatment in older adults with CATD that report cognition, function, global measures, behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD), or harms. Minimum treatment was 24 weeks (≥2 weeks for selected BPSD).
DATA EXTRACTION
Studies with low or medium risk of bias (ROB) were analyzed. Two reviewers rated ROB. One reviewer extracted data; another verified extraction accuracy.
DATA SYNTHESIS
Fifty-five studies reporting non-BPSD outcomes (most ≤26 weeks) and 12 reporting BPSD (most ≤12 weeks) were analyzed. Across CATD severity, mostly low-strength evidence suggested that, compared with placebo, cholinesterase inhibitors produced small average improvements in cognition (median standardized mean difference [SMD], 0.30 [range, 0.24 to 0.52]), no difference to small improvement in function (median SMD, 0.19 [range, -0.10 to 0.22]), no difference in the likelihood of at least moderate improvement in global clinical impression (median absolute risk difference, 4% [range, 2% to 4%]), and increased withdrawals due to adverse events. In adults with moderate to severe CATD receiving cholinesterase inhibitors, low- to insufficient-strength evidence suggested that, compared with placebo, add-on memantine inconsistently improved cognition and improved global clinical impression but not function. Evidence was mostly insufficient about prescription drugs for BPSD and about supplements for all outcomes.
LIMITATION
Most drugs had few trials without high ROB, especially for supplements, active drug comparisons, BPSD, and longer trials.
CONCLUSION
Cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine slightly reduced short-term cognitive decline, and cholinesterase inhibitors slightly reduced reported functional decline, but differences versus placebo were of uncertain clinical importance. Evidence was mostly insufficient on drug treatment of BPSD and on supplements for all outcomes.
PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. (PROSPERO: CRD42018117897).

Identifiants

pubmed: 32340037
pii: 2765187
doi: 10.7326/M19-3887
doi:

Substances chimiques

Prescription Drugs 0

Types de publication

Journal Article Meta-Analysis Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S. Systematic Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

656-668

Auteurs

Howard A Fink (HA)

Minneapolis VA Health Care System and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (H.A.F., J.R.M., L.S.H., B.C.T., T.J.W.).

Eric J Linskens (EJ)

Minneapolis VA Health Care System, Minneapolis, Minnesota (E.J.L., R.M., M.A.M.).

Roderick MacDonald (R)

Minneapolis VA Health Care System, Minneapolis, Minnesota (E.J.L., R.M., M.A.M.).

Pombie C Silverman (PC)

University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa (P.C.S.).

J Riley McCarten (JR)

Minneapolis VA Health Care System and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (H.A.F., J.R.M., L.S.H., B.C.T., T.J.W.).

Kristine M C Talley (KMC)

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (K.M.T., M.L.F., P.J.D., V.A.N., M.B., W.N., J.M.O., M.B.).

Mary L Forte (ML)

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (K.M.T., M.L.F., P.J.D., V.A.N., M.B., W.N., J.M.O., M.B.).

Priyanka J Desai (PJ)

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (K.M.T., M.L.F., P.J.D., V.A.N., M.B., W.N., J.M.O., M.B.).

Victoria A Nelson (VA)

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (K.M.T., M.L.F., P.J.D., V.A.N., M.B., W.N., J.M.O., M.B.).

Margaret A Miller (MA)

Minneapolis VA Health Care System, Minneapolis, Minnesota (E.J.L., R.M., M.A.M.).

Laura S Hemmy (LS)

Minneapolis VA Health Care System and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (H.A.F., J.R.M., L.S.H., B.C.T., T.J.W.).

Michelle Brasure (M)

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (K.M.T., M.L.F., P.J.D., V.A.N., M.B., W.N., J.M.O., M.B.).

Brent C Taylor (BC)

Minneapolis VA Health Care System and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (H.A.F., J.R.M., L.S.H., B.C.T., T.J.W.).

Weiwen Ng (W)

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (K.M.T., M.L.F., P.J.D., V.A.N., M.B., W.N., J.M.O., M.B.).

Jeannine M Ouellette (JM)

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (K.M.T., M.L.F., P.J.D., V.A.N., M.B., W.N., J.M.O., M.B.).

Kerry M Sheets (KM)

Hennepin Healthcare and Minneapolis VA Health Care System, Minneapolis, Minnesota (K.M.S.).

Timothy J Wilt (TJ)

Minneapolis VA Health Care System and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (H.A.F., J.R.M., L.S.H., B.C.T., T.J.W.).

Mary Butler (M)

University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota (K.M.T., M.L.F., P.J.D., V.A.N., M.B., W.N., J.M.O., M.B.).

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