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Alzheimer's Drugs Very Risky
Widely prescribed anti-psychotic drugs
do not help most Alzheimer's patients with
delusions and aggression and are not worth
the risk of sudden death and other side effects,
the first major study on sufferers outside
nursing homes concludes.
The finding could increase the burden on
families struggling to care for relatives
with the mind-robbing disease at home.
"These medications are not the answer," said
Dr. Thomas Insel, director of the National
Institute of Mental Health, which paid for
the study. He said better medications are
at least several years away.
Three-fourths of the 4.5 million Americans
with Alzheimer's disease
develop aggression, hallucinations or delusions,
which can lead them to lash out at caregivers
or harm themselves. This behavior is the most
common reason families put people with Alzheimer's
in a nursing home.
The study tested Zyprexa, Risperdal and Seroquel
newer drugs developed for schizophrenia.
Doctors are free to prescribe them for any
use. However, the drugs carry a strong warning
that they increase the risk of death for elderly
people with dementia-related psychotic symptoms,
mainly because of heart problems and pneumonia,
and that they are not approved for such patients.
Yet roughly one-quarter of nursing home patients
are on these drugs, and at least that many
patients at home have used them, mainly because
there are no great alternatives and there
was some evidence they might help a little,
experts say.
The study tested the drugs on 421 patients
at 42 medical centers who needed considerable
care but were living in their own home, a
relative's or an assisted-living facility.
The findings were reported in Thursday's
New England Journal of Medicine.
Each patient got one of the drugs or a dummy
pill, without knowing what they received.
The doctor could raise the dose if needed.
Patients were followed for nine months, longer
than in most prior tests.
About four in five patients stopped taking
their pills early on average, within
five to eight weeks because the medications
were ineffectiven or had side effects that
included grogginess, worsening confusion,
weight gain, and Parkinson's-like symptoms
such as rigidity and trouble walking.
Five deaths were reported among the patients
on the medication, versus two among those
in the placebo group. But researchers said
the difference could be a matter of chance.
The causes of death were not disclosed.
Symptoms did improve in about 30 percent
of patients taking the drugs, as well as in
21 percent of those getting dummy pills, partly
because symptoms can naturally wax and wane.
Some patients who stopped taking one pill
were switched to another treatment for the
study's second phase, results of which are
to be reported next spring.
While the federal government paid for the
study, the medications were supplied by the
manufacturers: AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals
LP, maker of Seroquel; Eli Lilly and Co.,
maker of Zyprexa; and Johnson & Johnson,
maker of Risperdal. Most of the researchers
have received grants or consulting or lecture
fees from the industry.
Dr. Jason Karlawish of the University of
Pennsylvania's Alzheimer's Disease Center
wrote in an editorial that the drugs did help
a small group of patients who had little or
no side effects. He said Zyprexa and Risperdal
were both better than Seroquel or the placebo
in treating the behavioral problems.
Lead researcher Dr. Lon Schneider, director
of the Alzheimer's Disease Center of California
and a University of Southern California professor,
said doctors should try the drugs if necessary,
but watch patients closely and switch to something
else after a few weeks if there is no improvement
or side effects are too severe.
"Patients are put on these kinds of medications
and not particularly monitored and treated
for indefinite periods of time," Schneider
said. "That just maximizes risk."
Schneider said nursing home residents need
the drugs more because their behavior problems
are generally worse than patients still at
home, but their health is more fragile, raising
the danger of side effects.
Dr. Claudia Kawas, an adviser to the Alzheimer's
Association and a neurology professor at University
of California-Irvine, said she sometimes prescribes
the drugs. Kawas said that when delusions
or aggression develop, it is best to determine
if a change in the patient's life triggered
the symptoms and whether the behavior can
be managed with visits by a health worker.
Also, possible causes such as dehydration,
infections and side effects from other medications
should be ruled out.
Kawas noted that with the U.S. population
aging, the number of Alzheimer's patients
is expected to quadruple by mid-century to
about 18 million.