1 / 80

Prevention of Alzheimer’s Disease

Prevention of Alzheimer’s Disease. Heidi D. Klepin Resident Grand Rounds November 28, 2000. Case History. 58 y/o WF presenting for routine office visit Review of systems negative PMH: arthritis FH: colon cancer and CAD SH: office work, no tobacco, social ETOH

shaw
Télécharger la présentation

Prevention of Alzheimer’s Disease

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Prevention of Alzheimer’s Disease Heidi D. Klepin Resident Grand Rounds November 28, 2000

  2. Case History • 58 y/o WF presenting for routine office visit • Review of systems negative • PMH: arthritis • FH: colon cancer and CAD • SH: office work, no tobacco, social ETOH • Medications: HRT (cuts into quarters) • PE: normal Labs: normal

  3. Case History • The patient has read in Prevention magazine that vitamin E will prevent Alzheimer’s disease. • She asks if there is anything she can take to help prevent Alzheimer’s disease. • Clinical Question: Are there any medications that prevent Alzheimer’s disease?

  4. Definition of Alzheimer’s Disease • Progressive neurologic disorder characterized by memory loss, cognitive dysfunction, personality changes and global functional decline. • Develops gradually • Diagnosis often missed in early stages

  5. Pathology • Neuritic plaques • Neurofibrillary tangles • Loss of synapses and neurons • Abnormal amyloid deposits • Increased inflammation • Neurotransmitter disturbances

  6. Pathology Amyloid Cascade Hypothesis • Central role in AD neuropathology • Amyloid- beta is found in abnormal amounts in the brains of AD patients • A-beta exerts toxic effects on neuronal tissue through oxidative damage and disturbances in calcium metabolism • A-beta is liberated from APP through a secondary (minor)pathway • Most risk factors for AD increase production of A-beta

  7. Pathology Multiple Mechanisms Amyloid Inflammation AD Neurotransmitter Oxidation Plaques, Tangles

  8. Epidemiology • Most common form of dementia • 4 million people affected • Incidence 0.5% per year at 65 • Incidence 8% per year at 85 • Prevalence 3% of 65 year olds • Prevalence 47% of 85 year olds

  9. Medical Complications • Increased incidence of the following: • Stroke • Infection (UTI and aspiration pneumonia) • Hip fractures • Nursing home placement

  10. Financial Burden • Cost of caring for 1 patient $47,000 / year • Combined cost for all patients $100 billion • Delay onset of disease by 1 year would decrease number of cases by 210,000 in 10 years and provide a savings of $10 billion • ($47,000X 210,000 fewer patients)

  11. Rationale for Prevention • Socially devastating disease • Economic burden • Medical complications • No available cure for AD • Aging population

  12. Rationale for Prevention • My name is Hal. • I don’t recognize my own shoes.

  13. Goals for Prevention • Identify high risk populations • Identify low risk interventions

  14. Definite Age Family history Down’s syndrome Genetic (ApoE-4) Suggested Female gender History of head trauma Small head circumference Low intelligence Low education level Risk Factors

  15. Protective Factors • Genetics (apoE-2 allele) • Education • Challenging occupations • Remaining mentally and socially active • ?? Medications (estrogen,NSAIDs, antioxidants)

  16. Estrogen Anti-inflammatory agents Anti-oxidants Ginkgo biloba Vaccine Medical Prevention Amyloid Inflammation AD Neurotransmitters Oxidation

  17. EstrogenPathophysiologic effects • Increased cholinergic activity • Decreased catabolism of catecholamines • Stimulation of neurite growth and synapse formation • Decreased production of beta-amyloid • Anti-inflammatory effect • Improved regional blood flow • Suppression of apoE-4 expression

  18. Clinical TrialsEstrogen • Observational Trials • Risk of Alzheimer’s disease • Effect on cognitive function • Randomized controlled trials • Effect on cognitive function

  19. Observational TrialsEstrogen and risk of AD • 6 cross-sectional trials address the risk of Alzheimer’s disease in estrogen users • Retrospectively compare estrogen use in patients with AD and matched controls

  20. Decreased Risk Henderson (1994) Paganini-Hill (1994) Mortel (1994) Baldereschi (1998) Waring (1999) No difference Brenner(1994) Observational TrialsEstrogen and Risk of AD

  21. Estrogen and Risk of ADProspective Trials • Tang et al. (1996) • Methods: prospective cohort • 1124 non-demented women • followed for 1-5 years • estrogen use obtained at study entry

  22. Estrogen and Risk of AD • Tang (cont.) • Results: 167 (14%) developed AD • 16% of non-estrogen users and 5.8% of estrogen users • RR of developing AD while using estrogen was 0.4 (95% CI 0.22-0.9)

  23. Estrogen and Risk of AD • Conclusions: Estrogen exposure decreased the risk of developing AD • This was the first prospective trial addressing this issue • Limitations: Nonrandomized design- cannot rule out inherent differences between study groups. Recall bias.

  24. Estrogen and Risk of AD • Kawas et al. (1997) • Methods: Prospective cohort • 514 women followed for 16 years • 2 year follow-ups with interviews and cognitive testing • Hormone history determine at interview

  25. Estrogen and Risk of AD • Kawas et al. (cont.) • Results: 45% of women used HRT • 34 cases of AD diagnosed with only 9 in HRT users • RR of developing AD with estrogen use was 0.457 (CI= 0.209-0.997), p value not given

  26. Summary of Observational TrialsEstrogen and Risk of AD • Evidence suggests a negative relationship between estrogen and development of AD • Cannot assume cause and effect without randomization • Most data on HRT subject to recall bias

  27. Cross Sectional TrialsEstrogen and Cognition

  28. Prospective TrialsEstrogen and Cognition • Jacobs et al. (1998) • Methods: 727 elderly women • cognitive testing at base-line and 2.5 years • estrogen use per patient interview • only 11% used HRT in past and 2% at evaluation

  29. Prospective TrialsEstrogen and Cognition • Jacobs et al. (cont.) • Results: Estrogen users improved on immediate and delayed recall after 2.5 years while non-users declined (p<0.01 and p<0.001) • Conclusions: Estrogen use was associated with protective effect on recall over time

  30. Prospective TrialsEstrogen and Cognition • Jacobs et al. (cont.) • Limitations: Nonrandomized design. Large time interval between estrogen use and study (avg. 25 years) • Largest effect seen with patient taking estrogen < 1 year

  31. Prospective TrialsEstrogen and Cognition • Mathews (1999) • Methods: 9651 women mean age 72 • estrogen use obtained from interview • cognitive testing at base-line and 4-6 years

  32. Prospective TrialsEstrogen and Cognition • Mathews (cont.) • Results: Estrogen users performed better at baseline but did not exhibit less decline over time • Limitations:Nonrandomized design, high drop-out rate

  33. Summary- Observational TrialsEstrogen and Cognition • Four of six cross-sectional trials showed improvement in at least one parameter of cognitive function • Three large trials demonstrated no benefit • One of two prospective trials demonstrated decreased cognitive decline • No clearly reproducible benefit

  34. Randomized Controlled TrialsEstrogen and Cognition • Ten available RCTs • Limited by small size, short duration, non-uniform cognitive testing, poorly controlled • 8 of 10 studies showed some benefit of unclear significance

  35. ConclusionsEstrogen for Prevention of AD • Observational trials suggest a protective effect • There is no consistently reproducible benefit of estrogen on cognitive function • A large RCT of many years duration is necessary

  36. Future StudiesEstrogen for Prevention of AD • WHIMS Trial : • Large double blind placebo controlled RCT • Testing the hypothesis that HRT reduces incidence of all-cause dementia in older women • 8300 subjects followed for 6 years with cognitive testing • Results some time this decade!!?

  37. Anti-Inflammatory MedicationMechanism • Inflammatory changes in and around neuritic plaques • Increased acute phase reactants • Activation of complement system • ? APP itself acting as an acute phase reactant • AD may be a state of chronic neuro-inflammation

  38. Summary of meta-analysisMcGreer (1996)

  39. NSAIDsRisk of Alzheimer’s Disease • Veld et al (1998) • Methods: 7046 non-demented patients followed for 3 years • 101 new cases of AD were matched with controls • prescription data obtained from records • grouped into non-users, short term users and long term users (>2 months)

  40. NSAIDsRisk of Alzheimer’s Disease • Veld (cont.) • Results: Non-significant tendency toward risk reduction in users >6 months duration • Conclusion: No significant association • Limitations: Only 28 patients had been exposed > 6 months

  41. NSAIDsRisk of Alzheimer’s Disease • Anthony et al. (2000) • Methods: 5092 patients screened • 201 AD patients diagnosed • compared use of NSAIDs, aspirin, H2RA’s with controls • used antacids, tylenol as control medications

  42. NSAIDsRisk of Alzheimer’s Disease • Anthony et al. (cont.) • Results: use of aspirin, NSAIDs and H2RA’s associated with decreased prevalence of AD (OR= 0.5, 0.43,0.42) • Combination of ASA and NSAID increased significance (OR-0.17 with CI=0.04-0.48, p=0.027)

  43. NSAIDsRisk of Alzheimer’s Disease • Anthony et al. (cont.) • Conclusions: Significant negative association between anti-inflammatory agents, H2RA’s and AD • Limitations: Non-randomized. Duration and dose unknown. Recall bias.

  44. Prospective TrialsNSAIDs and Cognition • Rozzini et al. (1996) • Methods: 7671 elderly patients enrolled • Cognitive testing at baseline and 3 years • Medication use per patient interview

  45. Prospective TrialsNSAIDs and Cognition • Rozzini et al (cont.) • Results: 21% were chronic NSAID users (3 years) • Mean test score higher in NSAID group at termination of trial • Less decline in score in NSAID group

  46. NSAIDs and Cognition • Rozzini et al. (cont.) • Conclusions: Supports association between NSAIDs and reduction of cognitive decline in elderly patients • Limitations: Non-randomized. No dosage information. Surrogate marker for AD

  47. Prospective TrialsNSAIDs and Cognition • Prince et al. (1998) • Methods: 2651 patients in HTN trial • Cognitive testing done at baseline and every 3 months for 4.5 years • Medication info per patient interview

  48. Prospective TrialsNSAIDs and Cognition • Prince et al. (cont.) • Results: Negative association between NSAID use and decline in associative memory (p<0.04) • Limitations: Non-randomized. No dosage or duration information. Recall bias. Clinical application?

  49. Prospective TrialsNSAIDs and Risk of AD • Stewart et al. (1997) • Methods: 1686 subjects followed for 15 years with cognitive testing every 2 years • Medication information obtained from interviews

  50. Prospective TrialsNSAIDs and Risk of AD • Stewart et al. (cont.) • Results: 81 cases of AD diagnosed • NSAID users had decreased incidence of AD with increasing duration of use • >2 years RR 0.40 (CI 0.19-0.84) • Aspirin showed a non-significant trend • Acetaminophen showed no change (RR 1.35)

More Related