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The Management of Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias The Treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease and Disease Progression Modification Alzheimer’s Disease (AD): Overview Progressive, degenerative CNS disorder Characterized by memory impairment plus one or more additional cognitive disturbances Gradual decline in three key symptom domains – Activities of daily living (ADL) – Behavior and personality – Cognition Most common cause of dementia in people aged 65 and over Alzheimer’s Disease: Economic Consequences Third most expensive disease in the US Costs over $100 billion/year Further $33 billion in lost productivity and other employer costs 3/4 of patients admitted to residential care within 5 years of diagnosis Evans DA, Scherr PA, Smith LA, et al. Aging (Milano). 1990(Sept);2(3):298-302; Ernst RL, Hay JW. Am J Public Health. 1994(Aug);84(8):1261-1264; Alzheimer’s Association, 2002 Potential Impact of Interventions to Delay Onset of Alzheimer’s Disease Delay (Years) 0 1 5 8 6 4 2 2017 2027 2007 1997 Adapted from Brookmeyer et al, 1998. 0 2047 2037 Number of Patients Potential to Increase Diagnosis and Treatment Across Disease Stages Number of patients1 Diagnosed2 Treated with AChE inhibitor3 1,400,000 1,200,000 1,000,000 800,000 600,000 400,000 200,000 0 Mild4 Moderate4 Disease Stages Severe4 AChE = acetylcholinesterase 1Mattson Jack; 2MMI MDAD, 2001; 3On CHeI—midpoint of last year’s treatment by severity rates and rates reported in Reminyl uptake, 2001; 4Decision Resources. Long-term Effects of Tacrine on Nursing Home Placement Probability of Remaining at Home 1.0 0.8 80 mg 0.6 >80 to 120 mg >120 to 160 mg 0.4 0 12 28 42 57 71 85 Time (Weeks) Knopman D, Scheider L, Davis K et al. Neurology. 1996(July);47(1):166-177. 100 114 Dementia Increases the Costs of Caring for Common Comorbidities in Managed Medicare Settings Congestive Heart Failure Diabetes with Chronic Complications Diabetes Nondemented 19,300 matched Chronic Pulmonary Disease ADRD 3,934 Peripheral Vascular Disease Cerebrovascular Disease Renal Disease 0 5 10 15 20 Annual Cost (Thousands) Hill JW, Futterman R, Duttagupta S, et al. Neurology. 2002(Jan 8);58(1):62-70. 25 Caregiver Burden in AD Compared with noncaregiver controls matched by age, gender, race and marital status, caregivers of persons with AD or related disorders require – 46% more physician visits – 71% more prescribed medications – Higher diastolic blood pressure – Hypercoagulable state – Higher plasma norepinephrine Haley WE, Levine EG, Brown SL, et al. Am J Geriatr Soc. 1987(May);35(5):405-411 Shaw et al., J Psychosom Res 2003; 54:293-302 vonKanel et al., Am J of Cardiol 2001(June);87:1405-1408 Grant I, Psychosom Med 1999; 61:420-423 Differential Diagnosis of Dementia Other dementias Frontal lobe dementia Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease Corticobasal degeneration Progressive supranuclear palsy Many others Vascular dementias Multi-infarct dementia Binswanger’s disease Dementia with Lewy bodies Parkinson’s disease Diffuse Lewy body disease Lewy body variant of AD Vascular dementias and AD AD and dementia with Lewy bodies AD 5% 10% 65% Small et al, 1997; APA, 1997; Morris, 1994. 5% 7% 8% Neuropathologic Changes Characteristic of AD Normal AD AP AP=amyloid plaques; NFT=neurofibrillary tangles Courtesy of George Grossberg M.D.; St. Louis University. NFT PET and Genetic Risk for Alzheimer’s Disease Normal Memory Dementia PET Imaging -6% Genetic Risk: No APOE -4 -14% APOE -4 Small GW, Ercoli LM, Silverman DH. Proc Natl Acad Sci. USA. 2000(May) 23);97(11):6037-6042 . -28% -31% UCI Brain Imaging Center Alzheimer’s Disease Normal Control Decreased temporoparietal Frontal lobe Occipital lobe Cerebellum 0.00 19.36 mg/100 g/min PET in the Evaluation of Dementia 284 dementia patients (138 autopsy-confirmed diagnosis) Sensitivity 93%; specificity 76% Negative PET scan indicated chance of cognitive progression <20% over 3 years Silverman DH, Small GW, Chang CY, et al. JAMA. 2001 Nov 7;286(17):2120-2127 ADAS-Cog Sscore Mean Change from Baseline Model-based Analysis: ADAS-Cog Score Mean Change from Baseline Improvement –6 0 6 Decline in ADAS-Cog score based on the natural history of untreated patients with moderate AD* 12 18 0 6 12 14 N=133 26 38 50 62 74 Cumulative Weeks from Baseline of the Double-blind Study Rogers and Friedhoff, 1998; *Stern et al, 1994. 85 98 Decline Major Cholinergic Changes in AD Depletion of acetylcholine (ACh): especially in moderate to severe disease stages Decline in choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity Loss of cholinergic neurons – Loss of muscarinic (M2) receptors – Loss of nicotinic receptors (nAChR) AChE Butylcholinesterase (BuChE) Flynn et al, 1995; Perry et al, 1978; Rodriguez-Puertas et al, 1997; Whitehouse et al, 1982. Normal Cholinergic Function Presynaptic neuron Acetyl CoA + Choline Glial cell Choline ChAT BuChE MR1 MR2 Synaptic cleft Postsynaptic neuron MR1 MR2 ACh NR BuChE ACh AChE Choline + Acetate NR CoA=coenzyme A; MR=muscarinic receptor; NR=nicotinic receptor Adapted from Adem, 1992. AChE Cholinesterase Inhibitors H3C ACh CH3 CH3 H3C Rivastigmine N mechanism: AChE/BuChE-I CH3 H3CO H3CO H3C O N N C H2 Donepezil mechanism: AChE-I Physicians’ Desk Reference, 2003. O CH3 CH3 O CH3 O H3C N O C H2 + N . HO NEW O OCH3 Galantamine mechanism: AChE-I ChE Inhibitors: Overview AChE Inhibitors Dual AChE/ BuChE Inhibitor Characteristic Donepezil Galantamine Rivastigmine Doses per day 1 2 2 Maximum dose (mg/d) 10 24 12 Brain region selectivity No No Yes Reversibility Reversible Reversible Psuedoreversible Nicotinic allosteric modulation No Yes No Cytochrome P450 metabolism Yes No Yes Enz et al, 1992, 1993; Samochocki et al, 2000; Svensson and Nordberg, 1997; Yamanishi et al, 1990; Cutler and Sramek, 1998; Inglis, 2002. Allosteric Nicotinic Receptor Modulation ACh-Induced Current (pA) 1,000 NEW 800 600 Galantamine Rivastigmine Metrifonate Tacrine Donepezil 400 200 Response amplitude to 100 µM ACh 0 0.001 0.010 0.100 1.000 Concentration (µM) Samochocki M, Zerlin M, Jostock R, et al. Acta Neurol Scand Suppl. 2000;176:68-73 10.000 Distribution of Cholinesterases in the Healthy Human Brain Figure 2† Figure 1* Amygdala AChE BuChE Hippocampus BuChE neurons are less abundant than AChE neurons BuChE is very rich in cortical and limbic areas (amygdala and hippocampus) BuChE accumulations in neuritic plaques *Darvesh S, Grantham DL, Hopkins DA. J Comp Neurol. 1998(April 13);393(3):374-390. †Mesulam, 2000. Distribution of Cholinesterases in the Healthy Human Thalamus Darvesh S, Hopkins DA. J Comp Neurol. 2003;463(1):25-43. 150 Rivastigmine 3 mg po 100 50 0 0 2.5 5.0 7.5 10.0 12.5 Time (Hours) AChE in CSF Cognitive Performance CNTB CNTB summary score Paired assoc. learning Paired assoc. learning/delayed recall Visual memory *P<.01; **P<.05 CNTB=computerized neurophysiological test battery CSF=cerebrospinal fluid Percentage of Baseline mean ± SEM Percentage of Baseline mean ± SEM Rivastigmine Inhibition of CSF BuChE/AChE: Correlation with CNTB Scores 150 Rivastigmine 3 mg po 100 50 0 0 2.5 5.0 7.5 10.0 12.5 Time (Hours) BuChE in CSF AUC BuChE Activity AChE Activity -0.65* -0.56* -0.53** -0.22 -0.69* -0.36 -0.52** -0.42 Cutler et al, 1998; Costa et al, 1999; Giacobini et al, 2002. Relation between Activity and Numbers of Senile Plaques in the Cerebral Cortex Percentage of activity in group with no plaques 200 BuChE 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 AChE 40 ChAT 20 0 0 1-5 6-10 11-20 21-30 30-42 Mean Plaque Count Perry, 1978. Compact Plaque Formation Guillozet et al, 1997. Activity of ChEs and b-amyloid (Ab) Deposition in AD Cortex G1 nmol/Min. x mg Protein 1.50 1.25 1.00 0.75 AChE BuChE 0.50 0 Arendt et al, 1992. 50 100 150 200 Density of Ab Deposition Long-term CSF Inhibition: Upregulation of AChE by Tacrine, Donepezil, and Galantamine 50 700 P=.0013 CSF AChE Protein AChE Activity mmol/mL/Min. 800 40 30 20 10 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 Baseline 12 months Tacrine (80–160 mg/day) 0 12 0 6 0 6 0 12 months Donepezil Galantamine Placebo 10 mg Nordberg et al, 1999. 12 0 5 mg 32 mg 24 mg Davidsson et al, 2001. Long-term CSF Inhibition: Sustained Inhibition of AChE and BuChE by Rivastigmine 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 -10 0 3 6 9 12 Treatment Length (Months) Darreh-Shori et al, 2002. Inhibition of CSF BuChE (%) Inhibition of CSF AChE (%) High-dose rivastigmine Low-dose rivastigmine 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 -10 0 3 6 9 12 Treatment Length (Months) ADAS-Cog Score mean Change from Baseline Model-based Analysis: ADAS-Cog Score Mean Change from Baseline Improvement –6 0 6 Decline in ADAS-Cog score based on the natural history of untreated patients with moderate AD* 12 18 0 6 12 14 26 38 50 62 74 Cumulative Weeks from Baseline of the Double-blind Study Rogers and Friedhoff, 1998; *Stern et al, 1994. 85 98 Decline ADAS-Cog Score Mean Change from Baseline ADAS-Cog: Mean Change from Baseline during up to 36 Months’ Treatment with Galantamine –6 –4 –2 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 Estimated decline: Stern equation 12 months placebo Galantamine 24–32/24 mg/d Baseline 3 Number of Patients 6 9 12 Baseline 165 Truyen and Kershaw, 2002; Stern et al, 1994. 18 Time (Months) 3 165 24 Time (Months) 6 9 12 165 165 160 30 36 24 124 36 81 Discrimination between Disease Modification and Symptomatic Benefit Withdrawal Design Randomized phase Placebo phase Active Disease-modifying effect Placebo Performance Performance Randomized phase Staggered-start Design Placebo phase Active Placebo Symptomatic effect Symptomatic effect Disease-modifying effect Time Leber, 1997. Time ADAS-Cog Mean Change from Baseline Effects of Donepezil on Cognition -3 *** -2 Improvement *** *** -1 ** 0 * 1 2 3 4 Baseline *** 10 mg/day (n=157) 5 mg/day (n=154) Placebo (n=162) 6 12 18 Weeks on Therapy Endpoint 30 Decline Placebo washout *P<.0012; **P<.0007; ***P<.0001 vs placebo; mean MMSE score=19 Rogers SL, Farlow MR, Doody RS, Mohs R, Friedhoff LT. Neurology. 1998(Jan);50(1):136-145 Long-term Effects of Galantamine on Cognition: ADAS-Cog Change from Baseline Galantamine 24 mg/ Galantamine 24 mg (n=116) (n=135) Double-blind Galantamine 32 mg/ Galantamine 24 mg (n=102) Open-label –4 ADAS-Cog mean (± SEM) Change from Baseline Placebo/ Galantamine 24 mg Improvement –3 –2 –1 * 0 1 2 All patients receive galantamine 3 4 Baseline 13 26 Time (Weeks) OC analysis; *P=.03 vs placebo/galantamine 24 mg Raskind et al, 2000. 39 Decline 52 ADAS-Cog Mean Change (± SEM) from Baseline Long-term Effects of Rivastigmine on Cognition: ADAS-Cog Rivastigmine 6–12 mg Placebo Rivastigmine 1–4 mg Projected placebo 2 1 0 –1 –2 –3 –4 –5 –6 –7 –8 –9 All patients taking rivastigmine 0 *P<.05 vs projected placebo Farlow et al, 2000. 12 18 26 Study Week 38 44 52 Effect of Long-term Rivastigmine Therapy on Cognition in Patients GDS ≥5 Rivastigmine 6–12 mg/d Rivastigmine 1–4 mg/d Placebo treatment up to 26 weeks Projected placebo All patients taking rivastigmine 2–12 mg/d ADAS-Cog Mean Change from Baseline (± SEM) –5 *** *** *** *** *** *** *** * *** 0 5 *** *** * * 10 * 15 20 *P<.05; ***P<.001 vs projected placebo OC data set Baseline GDS 5 25 30 * 0 Doraiswamy et al, 2000. 26 38 44 52 Study Week 78 104 Mean Change in ADAS-Cog Rivastigmine Effect on Cognitive Function: Return Dropouts at Week 26 –2 –1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 6–12 mg/day 1–4 mg/day Placebo * RDO Population *P<.05 Farlow et al, 2003. Natural Progression of AD over 6 Months vs the Effects of Rivastigmine Rivastigmine responders minus baseline Placebo Increase No change Decrease Increased frontal cortex Potkin SG et al., Int J Neuropsychopharmacol. 2001;4(3):223-230 Increased hippocampus Glucose Metabolism in Cortical Association Areas for AD Patients with and without Rivastigmine Treatment Glucose metabolism Baseline Untreated (n=12) 44 42 40 38 36 34 32 30 28 26 24 22 P<0.05 all brain regions Brain region Nordberg. 12 months Treated (n=11) 44 42 40 38 36 34 32 30 28 26 24 22 Brain region AChE and BuChE Activities in Human Postmortem AD Brain ChE Activity % of Respective Control Values ± SEM 200 AChE BuChE 100 0 Cortex Hippocampus Cortex AD Brain Region Perry EK, et al. Neuropathol Appl Neurobiol. 1978;(4):273-277 Hippocampus Selective Association of BuChE with Amyloid Plaques in Cortex AD BuChE staining in plaques, tangles, dystrophic neurites, and glia in AD BuChE staining primarily glial in nondemented Guillozet AL, Smiley JF, Mash DC, Mesulam MM. Ann Neurol. 1997(Dec);42(6):909-918 AChE and BuChE Inhibitors Decrease Endogenous b-APP Levels in Rats Secreted b-APP Levels in Rat CSF (Control ± SEM %) Nonlesion Nucleus basalis lesion 200 150 100 50 0 Control Phenserine AChEI Haroutunian V, et al. Brain Res Mol Brain Res. 1997;46(1-2):161-168 Cymserine BuChEI Disease Progression: Rate of Cognitive Decline in DLB Correlated with BuChE Levels at Autopsy MMSE Decline/Year 12 10 8 6 4 2 R=0.88 P<.002 0 –2 0 0.7 0.8 0.9 BuChE Level in Medial Temporal Cortex N=9 Perry et al, in press. 1.0 Correlation between CSF [Phospho-tau] and MMSE Decrease in MCI Annual MMSE Decrease 10 0 –10 –20 0 RHO=-.30 P<.01 Buerger et al, 2002. 300 600 900 1,200 1,500 CSF p-tau231 (pg/mL) 1,800 2,100 CSF Tau Levels in Treated and Untreated AD Patients Baseline 1,300 Followup (12 months) CSF tau Level (pg/mL) 1,100 900 P=.04* 700 P=.005* P=.16 500 300 100 Control Stefanova et al, 2003. Tacrine Rivastigmine Greater Awareness May Lead to Earlier Diagnosis and Treatment Physician would have been consulted sooner if caregiver or others had known about early signs Yes 45% No 32% Physician would have been consulted sooner if caregiver or others had known about prescription medication 47 Not Sure 23% 50% cases of moderate AD remain undiagnosed 70% cases of mild AD remain undiagnosed Harris Interactive Inc., 2001. 53 Summary Both AChE and BuChE can contribute to the loss of ACh, which underlies many of the symptoms in AD Inhibition of CSF AChE and BuChE with rivastigmine correlates with clinical benefits BuChE increases with severity of AD BuChE may play a role in plaque maturation and APP processing Both AChE and BuChE are pharmacological targets Lack of upregulation with rivastigmine implies that cognitive benefits are sustained during long-term treatment Increased AChE protein following galantamine and donepezil is of uncertain clinical importance Summary (cont’d) AD is an expensive illness in human and economic terms for patient and care givers Diagnosis is often not made, especially in early and mild AD Frequently treatment is not initiated or sustained Early treatment pays off; delaying treatment has long-term consequences Functional imaging can aid in early diagnosis of dementia Moderately ill patients can robustly respond to tx Cholinesterase inhibitors attenuate symptomatic decline and may modify disease progression