1. Long-term cognitive benefits of donepezil in Alzheimer?s disease: A retrospective comparison between 1994?1999 and 2000?2004
- Author
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Masako Tamamizu, Masahiro Maruyama, Koh Iwasaki, Mari Ootsuki, Naoki Tomita, Miho Tsutsui, Miyako Higuchi, Isao Yoshimura, Katsutoshi Furukawa, Takashi Seki, Toshifumi Matsui, Takashi Sozu, and Hiroyuki Arai
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cognition ,Disease ,Confidence interval ,Discontinuation ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,Cognitive Changes ,medicine ,Cholinergic ,Donepezil ,Psychiatry ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objective: In order to address an issue of how long Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients should receive donepezil, we estimated long-term effect of donepezil on cognition as well as its influential factors. We also evaluated the additional effect of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-tau protein levels on diagnosis. Methods: We compared cognitive changes between current (2000–2004) AD patients (donepezil users) and previous AD patients, seen by us 1994–1999, without receiving donepezil (non-donepezil users) by a mixed effect model. Cognition was assessed by Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) at 6-month intervals up to 24 months. Sensitivity analysis was performed exclusively on patients with high CSF-tau protein levels (CSF-tau >330 pg/mL) to minimize inaccuracies of the diagnosis Results: From 495 AD patients reviewed, 192 patients (120 donepezil users and 72 controls) were eligible. Estimated annual decline of MMSE was 1.2 points (95% confidence interval (95%CI), 0.9–1.5) in the donepezil users, whereas it was 2.8 points (95%CI, 2.1–3.6) in the control group. The difference was statistically significant (P
- Published
- 2007
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