Effects of memantine on behavioural symptoms in Alzheimer's disease patients: An analysis of the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) data of two randomised, controlled studies.

Aún no traducido Aún no traducido
Autores
Categoría Estudio primario
RevistaInternational journal of geriatric psychiatry
Año 2005

Este artículo está incluido en 1 Revisión sistemática Revisiones sistemáticas (1 referencia)

Este artículo es parte de los siguientes hilos de publicación
Cargando información sobre las referencias

INTRODUCTION:

Behavioural symptoms are common in moderate to severe Alzheimer's disease (AD). We have analysed the databases of two randomised studies with regard to the effects of memantine treatment on behavioural symptoms, measured using the 12-item version of the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI). Subjects: The monotherapy study (memantine only) reported by Reisberg et al. (2003) involved 252 patients with baseline MMSE total score of between 3 and 14, whereas the combination study (memantine and donepezil) reported by Tariot et al. (2004) comprised 404 patients with MMSE scores of between 5 and 14. In both studies, patients received 10 mg memantine b.i.d. or matching placebo, and lived in the community.

METHODS:

For both studies NPI total and individual domains scores were analysed in the ITT population. For the monotherapy study a dichotomised analysis was performed separately for patients who had behavioural symptoms at baseline and for those without pre-existing symptoms. Furthermore, a factor analysis was used to identify any behavioural clusters within the patient population.

RESULTS:

In both studies, the change in NPI total scores at endpoint was consistently in favour of memantine treatment, reaching statistical significance in the combination study (p=0.002). Memantine treatment showed a significant beneficial effect in comparison to placebo treatment in the NPI agitation/aggression domain in both studies (p=0.008; p=0.001). The dichotomised analysis of the monotherapy study showed that there was significantly less agitation/aggression emerging in the memantine-treated group compared to placebo (p=0.003). Factor analysis showed that hyperactivity accounted for 27% of the data variance.

CONCLUSIONS:

Memantine has a beneficial effect on the behavioural symptoms of patients with moderate to severe AD, with the most pronounced effect on agitation/aggression. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)
Epistemonikos ID: 547260fe1b94e197b5e11cf3b973ec1f58b7dbed
First added on: Jul 08, 2016