In a presentation delivered this week at the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry annual meeting in Baltimore, Alzheimer's disease researcher Gary W. Small, MD, reported that the Novartis Pharmaceuticals drug Exelon appeared to slow disease progression in 83 patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease who took it for five years.
The patients were the only ones among roughly 2,000 original participants in four separate Exelon studies still taking the drug five years later. The 83 patients continued to experience mental declines while on Exelon, but most did not progress to the severe cognitive decline that would have been expected without treatment.
Although there is no cure for Alzheimer's disease, and with time the disease get progressively worse, some patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease were more likely to show improvement while taking the drug than those taking placebo.
"This tells us that there is a subset of patients who appear to do better than they would have if they stay on this medication," Small tells WebMD. "It suggests these drugs can work for long periods. It also lets clinicians know that if a patient has tolerated this medication well and continues to have a reasonable quality of life they should probably stay on it."
AD Drugs Don't Work for all Patients
Exelon is among a group of drugs known as cholinesterase inhibitors, which boost levels of a key neurotransmitter linked to brain function. This chemical called acetylcholine helps with memory and learning. In Alzheimer's disease nerves degeneration results in decreasing levels of this neurotransmitter substance. This decrease is linked closely with cognitive deficits in patients.
Other cholinesterase inhibitors approved to treat mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease include Pfizer's Aricept; Warner Lambert's Cognex; and Janssen Pharmaceutical's Reminyl.
Alzheimer's Association spokesman Bill Thies, PhD, tells WebMD that roughly one-third of Alzheimer's patients who go on the drugs have "robust" responses, while the remaining patients either have "mediocre" responses or don't respond at all.