TY - JOUR
T1 - Tetrahydroaminoacridine–lecithin combination treatment in patients with intermediate-stage alzheimer's disease
T2 - Results of a Canadian Double-Blind, Crossover, Multicenter Study
AU - Gauthier, Serge
AU - Bouchard, Rémi
AU - Lamontagne, Albert
AU - Bailey, Peter
AU - Bergman, Howard
AU - Ratner, Jack
AU - Tesfaye, Yoseph
AU - Saint-Martin, Monique
AU - Bacher, Yves
AU - Carrier, Louise
AU - Charbonneau, Roland
AU - Clarfield, A. Mark
AU - Collier, Brian
AU - Dastoor, Dolly
AU - Gauthier, Louise
AU - Germain, Marcel
AU - Kissel, Catherine
AU - Krieger, Monique
AU - Kushnir, Seymour
AU - Masson, Hélène
AU - Morin, Jacques
AU - Nair, Vasavan
AU - Neirinck, Leonard
AU - Suissa, Samy
PY - 1990/5/3
Y1 - 1990/5/3
N2 - We studied the efficacy and safety of oral tetrahydroaminoacridine (THA) combined with lecithin in 52 patients with Alzheimer's disease. The maximal tolerated dose of THA (up to 100 mg per day) was determined during an eight-week titration period, after which the tolerated dose of THA or placebo was given during two sequential randomized periods of treatment lasting eight weeks each. Highly purified lecithin (4.7 g per day) was administered during all phases of the study. Efficacy was expressed in terms of scores on the Mini—Mental State (MMS) test, the modified MMS test, the Hierarchic Dementia Scale, the Rapid Disability Rating Scale—ll, and the behavioral scale of Reisberg et al. Safety was assessed by careful clinical monitoring as well as serial measurements of liver aminotransferases. Forty-six patients completed the titration period, and 39 completed the double-blind period, during which only the MMS score showed a small but significant increase (P<0.05) after four weeks of treatment with THA. Autonomic side effects of THA were common but mild. Reversible elevations of serum aspartate and alanine aminotransferase levels to three or more times the upper limit of normal occurred in 17 percent of patients; most of the patients affected were women. A liver biopsy performed in one patient showed resolving focal liver-cell necrosis. These studies fail to demonstrate a significant clinical benefit of THA given orally in a maximal dose of 100 mg per day over a period of eight weeks in combination with lecithin. (N Engl J Med 1990; 322:1272–6.)
AB - We studied the efficacy and safety of oral tetrahydroaminoacridine (THA) combined with lecithin in 52 patients with Alzheimer's disease. The maximal tolerated dose of THA (up to 100 mg per day) was determined during an eight-week titration period, after which the tolerated dose of THA or placebo was given during two sequential randomized periods of treatment lasting eight weeks each. Highly purified lecithin (4.7 g per day) was administered during all phases of the study. Efficacy was expressed in terms of scores on the Mini—Mental State (MMS) test, the modified MMS test, the Hierarchic Dementia Scale, the Rapid Disability Rating Scale—ll, and the behavioral scale of Reisberg et al. Safety was assessed by careful clinical monitoring as well as serial measurements of liver aminotransferases. Forty-six patients completed the titration period, and 39 completed the double-blind period, during which only the MMS score showed a small but significant increase (P<0.05) after four weeks of treatment with THA. Autonomic side effects of THA were common but mild. Reversible elevations of serum aspartate and alanine aminotransferase levels to three or more times the upper limit of normal occurred in 17 percent of patients; most of the patients affected were women. A liver biopsy performed in one patient showed resolving focal liver-cell necrosis. These studies fail to demonstrate a significant clinical benefit of THA given orally in a maximal dose of 100 mg per day over a period of eight weeks in combination with lecithin. (N Engl J Med 1990; 322:1272–6.)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0025312142&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1056/NEJM199005033221804
DO - 10.1056/NEJM199005033221804
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0025312142
SN - 0028-4793
VL - 322
SP - 1272
EP - 1276
JO - New England Journal of Medicine
JF - New England Journal of Medicine
IS - 18
ER -