Factors Associated with Response to Acetylcholinesterase Inhibition in Dementia: A Cohort Study from a Secondary Mental Health Care Case Register in London |
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Authors: | Gayan Perera Mizanur Khondoker Matthew Broadbent Gerome Breen Robert Stewart |
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Affiliation: | 1. King''s College London (Institute of Psychiatry), London, United Kingdom.; 2. South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom.; Alexander Fleming Biomedical Sciences Research Center, Greece, |
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Abstract: | BackgroundAcetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) are widely used to delay cognitive decline in Alzheimer''s disease. Observational studies in routine clinical practice have shown cognitive improvement in some groups of patients receiving these agents but longitudinal trajectories before and after AChEI initiation have not previously been considered.ObjectivesTo compare trajectories of cognitive function before and after AChEI initiation and investigate predictors of these differences.MethodA retrospective longitudinal study was constructed using data from 2460 patients who received AChEIs and who had routine data on cognitive function (Mini-Mental State Examination; MMSE) before and after AChEI initiation. Longitudinal MMSE change was modelled using three-piece linear mixed models with the following segments: 0–12 months prior to AChEI initiation, 0–6 months and 6–36 months after initiation.ResultsMMSE decline was reversed (in that the slope was improved by an average 4.2 units per year, 95% CI 3.5–4.8) during the 6-month period following AChEI initiation compared with the slope in the one year period before AChEI initiation. The slope in the period from 6–36 months following AChEI initiation returned to the pre-initiation downward trajectory. The differences in slopes in the 1 year period prior to AChEI initiation and in the 6 months after initiation were smaller among those with higher MMSE scores at the time of AChEI initiation, among those who received a vascular dementia diagnosis at any point, and among those receiving antipsychotic agents.ConclusionIn this naturalistic observational study, changes in cognitive trajectories around AChEI initiation were similar to those reported in randomised controlled trials. The magnitude of the difference in slopes between the 1 year period prior to AChEI initiation and the 6 month period after AChEI initiation was related to level of cognitive function at treatment initiation, vascular comorbidity and antipsychotic use. |
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