Health & Medical Neurological Conditions

Drug May Slow Alzheimer's Progression

Drug May Slow Alzheimer's Progression

Drug May Slow Alzheimer's Progression


Exelon Currently Used to Treat Alzheimer's Symptoms

June 18, 2003 -- All FDA approved drugs for Alzheimer's disease are used to treat memory loss and other symptoms of the condition. But a new study involving one of the drugs -- Exelon -- suggests for the first time that they may also slow disease progression.

Researchers found that Alzheimer's patients who dropped out of one of three 26-week trials evaluating Exelon had delayed deterioration in mental function, even though they only took the medication for a few months. Their disease progressed more slowly than patients in the placebo arm of the study who never took Exelon, lead researcher Martin Farlow, MD, of the Indiana University School of Medicine, tells WebMD.

Farlow says the findings suggest a possible effect in delaying the biological progression of Alzheimer's disease. The study appears in the June issue of the journal Archives of Neurology.

"This study clearly shows that even exposure for a short time -- two, three, or four months -- can have an impact on disease progression," he says.

More than 4 million Americans have Alzheimer's disease, and that number could increase to more than 14 million over the next few decades, according to the Alzheimer's Association.

Although the trial only involved the Novartis Pharmaceutical's drug Exelon, other FDA-approved drugs for Alzheimer's -- Pfizer's Aricept, Warner Lambert's Cognex, and Janssen Pharmaceutica's Reminyl -- have similar mechanisms of action. All of these drugs boost levels of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine, which is instrumental in brain function, and all are approved for people with mild-to-moderate disease.

"It makes scientific sense that these drugs which impact acetylcholine levels would delay disease progression, but we haven't had the clinical data to tell us for sure if this is the case," Alzheimer's Association Vice President for Medical and Scientific Affairs Bill Thies, PhD, tells WebMD.

"This research is an interesting way to look at the question, but I don't think that it settles the matter at all. It certainly doesn't change the fact that none of these medications stop the progression of Alzheimer's disease."

Other Drugs in the Pipeline



But research is looking at other drugs for battling Alzheimer's disease. The FDA is considering approval of one of the first in a different class of Alzheimer's drugs. If approved, the drug memantine would be the first treatment available for patients who are in the later stages of Alzheimer's disease. Already approved in Europe, memantine targets a chemical in the brain known as glutamate.

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