Rountree_2013_Alzheimers.Dement_9_338

Reference

Title : Effectiveness of antidementia drugs in delaying Alzheimer's disease progression - Rountree_2013_Alzheimers.Dement_9_338
Author(s) : Rountree SD , Atri A , Lopez OL , Doody RS
Ref : Alzheimers Dement , 9 :338 , 2013
Abstract :

BACKGROUND: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) provide safety and efficacy data for regulatory approval of antidementia drugs, but offer limited data regarding real-world effectiveness. Long-term observational controlled studies (LTOCs) extend our understanding by providing longitudinal data across multiple stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD).
METHODS: Comparisons of strengths, limitations, evidence level, and results for monotherapy (cholinesterase inhibitors) and combination therapy (cholinesterase inhibitors + memantine) in RCTs versus LTOCs were made.
RESULTS: Similar to RCTs, LTOCs have shown that both monotherapy and combination therapy are associated with slower cognitive and functional decline. Combination therapy is associated with better cognitive outcomes and greater delays in time to nursing home admission versus monotherapy or no treatment. Persistent antidementia drug treatment is associated with slower decline in cognition, daily function, and global severity, even in patients with advanced disease.
CONCLUSIONS: LTOCs provide complementary evidence regarding effectiveness of antidementia therapy over many years, a time course relevant to AD management. These findings also provide compelling arguments in favor of using LTOCs to estimate effectiveness, risk-benefit, and costs of AD treatments.

PubMedSearch : Rountree_2013_Alzheimers.Dement_9_338
PubMedID: 23102979

Related information

Citations formats

Rountree SD, Atri A, Lopez OL, Doody RS (2013)
Effectiveness of antidementia drugs in delaying Alzheimer's disease progression
Alzheimers Dement 9 :338

Rountree SD, Atri A, Lopez OL, Doody RS (2013)
Alzheimers Dement 9 :338