Advanced search×

Effects of rivastigmine in Alzheimer's disease patients with and without hallucinations.

J Alzheimers Dis 20(1):301-11 (2010) PMID 20164585

Hallucinations in Alzheimer's disease (AD) may indicate greater cortical cholinergic deficits. Rivastigmine has shown larger treatment benefits versus placebo in dementia with Lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease dementia patients with hallucinations. In this retrospective, hypothesis-generating analysis, we investigated whether hallucinations in AD were associated with greater treatment benefits with rivastigmine. Data were pooled from two randomized, double-blind, 6-month, mild-to-moderate AD trials comparing rivastigmine with placebo. Co-primary efficacy parameters were the Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive subscale (ADAS-cog) and Clinician's Interview-Based Impression of Change plus Caregiver Input (CIBIC-plus). Efficacy data were analyzed for two sub-populations: those with and those without hallucinations at baseline. Of 927 patients, 194 (21%) reported hallucinations at baseline. Hallucinators tended to have greater decline on placebo on all outcome measures. On the ADAS-cog, mean rivastigmine - placebo differences of 3.7 points in hallucinators and 2.2 points in non-hallucinators were reported at 6 months (both p < 0.001). In hallucinators, a significant rivastigmine - placebo difference of -1.0 points (a beneficial effect) was seen on the CIBIC-plus at 6 months (p< 0.001). Non-hallucinators showed a smaller significant treatment difference of -0.3 points (p< 0.05). Interaction testing suggested that differences in treatment effects were significant between hallucinators and non-hallucinators. Hallucinations predicted greater treatment responses to oral rivastigmine.

DOI: 10.3233/JAD-2010-1362
Version: za2963e q8za7 q8zba q8zc6 q8zdf q8ze7 q8zfd q8zgc

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Pregnancy-induced rhinitis.

    Rhinology 51(2):111-9 (2013) PMID 23671891

    Pregnancy-induced rhinitis (PIR) is often misclassified and under-diagnosed. There is currently no cure or opti- mum symptomatic treatment. To summarize current knowledge of PIR and assess evidence supporting treatment options. Structured literature se...
  2. Computational design gains momentum in enzyme catalysis engineering.

    FEBS J (2013) PMID 23647554

    Computational protein design is becoming a powerful tool for tailoring enzymes for specific biotechnological applications. When applied to existing enzymes, computational redesign makes it possible to obtain orders of magnitude improvement in catalytic activity towards a new target s...
  3. Reliability Estimation in a Multilevel Confirmatory Factor Analysis Framework.

    Psychol Methods (2013) PMID 23646988

    We discuss the importance of examining level-specific reliability. We present a simulation study and an applied example showing different methods for estimating multilevel reliability using multilevel confirmatory factor analysis and provide supporting Mplus program code. We conclude that (a) single...