Cholinesterase Inhibitors: Drugs Looking for a Disease?
Marina Maggini*, Nicola Vanacore, Roberto Raschetti
Marina Maggini, Nicola Vanacore, and Roberto Raschetti are at the National
Center for Epidemiology, National Institute of Health, Rome, Italy.
Funding: The authors received no specific funding for this article.
Competing Interests: The authors' research is often funded by the Italian
National Health Service and by the Italian Medicines Agency, which is the
authority responsible for drug reimbursement procedures (including costs
connected to the prescribing of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors). The
authors themselves have no role in decisions concerning such reimbursement.
Published: April 11, 2006
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0030140
Copyright: © 2006 Maggini et al. This is an open-access article distributed
under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the
original author and source are credited.
Abbreviations: ADAS-cog, Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive
portion; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; MMSE, Mini Mental State
Examination; NICE, National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence;
RCT, randomized controlled trial
Citation: Maggini M, Vanacore N, Raschetti R (2006) Cholinesterase
Inhibitors: Drugs Looking for a Disease? PLoS Med 3(4): e140
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mmaggini iss.it
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Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are generally considered to be a robust
form of evidence, free from bias, and the trial results are often used as a
powerful tool to promote new drugs [1,2]. However, because the inclusion
criteria for many RCTs are often very restrictive (for example, trials
generally exclude patients with serious concomitant illnesses) and because
patients in trials tend to receive better care than those in standard-care
settings, clinicians should be careful about generalizing RCT results to
their own patients. Unfortunately, many drug treatments are widely used in
clinical practice, sometimes beyond the approved indications, even when
doubts remain about whether the results of RCTs of these drugs should be
generalized. In this article, we discuss the use of cholinesterase
inhibitors in patients with a variety of types of dementia and cognitive
impairment, looking critically at the clinical trial evidence on these
drugs.
If the results of these trials are not carefully evaluated, together with
evaluating the methodological quality of the studies, this could lead to
inappropriate prescribing of cholinesterase inhibitors. Drug companies have
invested heavily in developing treatments for Alzheimer disease, and then
were actively involved in expanding the market to other forms of dementia.
In the last decade, donepezil, galantamine, and rivastigmine have been
tested not only in patients with Alzheimer disease but also in patients with
vascular dementia, dementia with Lewy bodies, dementia associated with
Parkinson disease, and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Even when the
evidence on the efficacy of these drugs is lacking, or inconclusive, the
results are often presented in such a way as to create a false perception of
efficacy. For example, about 23 different scales or instruments (on average
six per trial) were used, in the trials considered here, as primary or
secondary outcome measures. Most of them were not validated for the disease
for which the drugs were tested and are not currently used in clinical
practice, undermining the translation of these research findings into
clinical practice. Moreover, the treatment effect in the trials is usually
expressed through the average change from baseline in test scores, without
discussing the clinical importance of the usually small effect size
observed.
Alzheimer Disease: Waiting for New Treatments
The cholinesterase inhibitor donepezil was licensed in the US in December
1996, before the full results of clinical trials were available in medical
journals [3]. The drug was launched with claims that it had produced "highly
significant improvements in cognitive and clinical global assessments" in
randomized trials lasting 30 weeks and had increased the proportion of
"treatment successes" by 245% in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer
disease [3]. Donepezil, galantamine, and rivastigmine went on to be approved
in many countries for the treatment of Alzheimer disease, even though it was
clear that the efficacy, in the short term, was modest, symptomatic, and
evident only in a subgroup of patients [4-8].
Search Strategy
For this article, we searched the MEDLINE database from 1996 to 2005 using
the terms donepezil, galantamine, and rivastigmine to find randomized
controlled clinical trials, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses. Our
article is not itself a systematic review, but we discuss all the major
RCTs, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses of these drugs as treatments for
Alzheimer disease, and we discuss the major RCTs of these drugs for other
forms of dementia.
In a meta-analysis of randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled trials of
cholinesterase inhibitors, Lanctôt and colleagues found that the pooled mean
proportion of responders to drug treatment in excess of that for placebo
treatment was only 10% (95% confidence interval, 4%-17%) [9]. In this study,
response to therapy was defined (according to a definition first proposed by
the US Food and Drug Administration) as an improvement of four or more
points on the Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive portion
(ADAS-cog) [10].
The most recent systematic review of RCTs, by Hanna Kaduszkiewicz and
colleagues, analyzed the scientific evidence for the clinical use of
cholinesterase inhibitors in Alzheimer disease, together with the
methodological quality of the trials [11]. The authors concluded that the
benefits are minimal, the methodological quality of the available trials is
poor, and the scientific basis for recommendations of these drugs for
Alzheimer disease is questionable [11].
A similar conclusion was reported in the preliminary draft of
recommendations on the use of cholinesterase inhibitors that is being
developed by the United Kingdom's National Institute for Health and Clinical
Excellence (NICE), an independent organization responsible for providing
national guidance on treating and preventing illness [12,13]. In its
preliminary draft appraisal document, the organization stated "that the RCT
evidence on outcomes of importance to patients and carers, such as quality
of life and time to institutionalisation, was limited and largely
inconclusive." Moreover, the NICE committee reported that the quality of the
reviewed trials was mixed, and that "the assessment group suspected
selection bias, measurement bias and attrition bias." The preliminary
recommendations of the appraisal committee were that "donepezil,
rivastigmine and galantamine are not recommended for use in the treatment of
mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease," and that further research is required
to identify subgroups of people for whom cholinesterase inhibitors may be
effective. The committee recently updated its guidance, as shown in the
Sidebar.
Patients with Alzheimer Disease and Vascular Risk Factors or Patients with
Vascular Dementia
The therapeutic potential of cholinesterase inhibitors has been explored in
clinical trials of patients with Alzheimer disease with concurrent vascular
risk factors, and also in patients with vascular dementia.
One 26-week placebo-controlled RCT evaluated the efficacy and safety of
rivastigmine for patients with mild to moderately severe Alzheimer disease
with or without concurrent vascular risk factors [14]. The authors concluded
that the drug is effective in patients with or without vascular risk
factors, and that those with vascular risk factors "experience greater
clinical benefit (cognition, activities of daily living, and disease
severity)." However, the withdrawal rate was higher for patients given the
drug than for patients given placebo, and there was no intention-to-treat
analysis.
The effect of galantamine was examined in a six-month RCT in a mixed
population of patients diagnosed as having probable vascular dementia,
Alzheimer disease with cerebrovascular disease, or an intermediate diagnosis
[15]. Unfortunately, the study was not powered to detect treatment
differences in the three subgroups; moreover, as in the study on
rivastigmine [14], the primary statistica |