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Alzheimer's treatment shock

New research into the effects of antipsychotic drugs commonly prescribed to Alzheimer’s patients concludes that the medication nearly doubles risk of death over three years.

The study, funded by the Alzheimer’s Research Trust, was led by Prof Clive Ballard’s King’s College London team and is published in the journal Lancet Neurology on 9 January.

The study involved 165 Alzheimer’s patients in care homes who were being prescribed antipsychotics. 83 continued treatment and the remaining 82 had it withdrawn and were given oral placebos instead.

Findings showed a significant increase in risk of death for patients who continued taking antipsychotic medication. The difference between the two groups became more pronounced over time, with 24-month survival rates for antipsychotic-treated patients falling to 46% versus 71% on the placebo and at 36 months it was 30% versus 59%.

Many more deaths
It means that after three years, less than a third of people on antipsychotics were alive compared to nearly two thirds using the dummy drug.

Antipsychotics are used to treat symptoms of agitation, delusions and aggressive behavior. Guidelines recommend that the drugs should only be used for short periods of time and where symptoms are severe, and should be very carefully monitored, although in clinical practice the average length of prescription is 1-2 years.

While there is evidence of modest short-term (6-12 weeks) benefits of antipsychotic treatment for the serious behavioral symptoms of Alzheimer’s, a previous Alzheimer’s Research Trust study showed that these benefits were not evident over longer periods of treatment.

As many as 100 000 people with dementia are routinely prescribed antipsychotics in UK care homes. It could mean 23 500 people dying prematurely, according to a 2008 report by Paul Burstow MP.

“The results further highlight the need to seek less harmful alternatives for the long-term treatment of behavioral symptoms in Alzheimer’s patients. At the moment, there is still a limited place for antipsychotics in the treatment of Alzheimer’s, particularly severe aggression, but the serious concerns of the drugs shown by our research emphasise the urgent need to put an end to unnecessary and prolonged prescribing,” said Prof Clive Ballard of King’s College London.

A wake-up call
“The findings of this research are a real wake-up call and underline the danger of prescribing antipsychotics long-term for anything other than exceptional circumstances. We must avoid the use of these drugs as a potentially dangerous ‘chemical cosh’ to patients who would be better off without it. The study also highlights the urgent need to develop better treatments as Alzheimer’s patients have few options available to them," said Rebecca Wood, Chief Executive of the Alzheimer’s Research Trust.

"Antipsychotic drugs can be effective in controlling unpleasant and disturbing behavioral symptoms of Alzheimer's disease, including severe aggression, delusions, and agitation. But this study shows, conclusively, that these drugs have a severe and serious cost in terms of increased mortality. The study follows the gold-standard double-blind, placebo-controlled method for clinical trials, and is unique in examining long-term effects of antipsychotic treatment on mortality in patients with Alzheimer's disease," added Dr Mark Baxter of the University of Oxford.

"Antipsychotics do not have any effects on the underlying disease processes of Alzheimer's disease. What is needed is not only an increased application of non-drug methods to improve behavioral health in patients with dementia - including cognitive-behavioral therapy and environmental design - as well as a better understanding of how Alzheimer's neuropathology causes behavioral disturbances in addition to its effects on memory, so that rational drug therapies can be developed that do not have the liabilities of currently-available antipsychotics," he said.

(EurekAlert, January 2009)

Read more:
Alzheimer's Centre

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