Cholinesterase (ChE) inhibition represents the most efficacious treatment approach for Alzheimer's disease (AD) to date. This multiple-dose study has examined the relationship between inhibition of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) activities in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and cognitive change (measured by the Computerised Neuropsychological Test Battery [CNTB]) following administration of the ChE inhibitor, rivastigmine (Exelon). In 18 patients with mild to moderate AD, CNTB scores, activities of AChE and BuChE in the CSF, and plasma BuChE activity were determined prior to treatment with rivastigmine. Doses of rivastigmine were then titrated (1 mg b.i.d./week) to final doses of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6 mg b.i.d. (n = 3 per dose). Following treatment with the target dose of rivastigmine for at least 3 days, CNTB scores were re-determined. CSF samples were continuously collected together with plasma samples prior to and for 12 hours after the final dose of rivastigmine, and AChE and BuChE activities determined.AChE in CSF and BuChE in plasma were dose-dependently inhibited by rivastigmine treatment. The inhibition of BuChE in CSF was not clearly dose-dependent. A statistically significant correlation was observed between the change in CNTB summary score and inhibition of AChE activity (r = -0.56, p < 0.05) and BuChE activity (r = -0.65, p < 0.01) in CSF. Improvement in speed-, attention- and memory-related subtests of the CNTB correlated significantly with inhibition of BuChE but not AChE activity in CSF. Weak or absent correlation with change in cognitive performance was noted for inhibition of plasma BuChE. These results indicate that cognitive improvement with rivastigmine in AD is associated with central inhibition of ChEs and support a role for central BuChE in addition to AChE inhibition in modulating cholinergic function in AD.
Introduction
Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test (FCSRT) performance identifies patients with preclinical disease at elevated risk for developing Alzheimer’s dementia, predicting diagnosis better than other memory tests.
Methods
Based on literature mapping FCSRT performance to clinical outcomes and biological markers, and on longitudinal preclinical data from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging, we developed the Stages of Objective Memory Impairment (SOMI) model. Five sequential stages of episodic memory decline are defined by Free Recall (FR) and Total Recall (TR) score ranges and years prior to dementia diagnosis. We sought to replicate the SOMI model using longitudinal assessments of 142 Einstein Aging Study participants who developed AD over 10 years.
Results
Average time to diagnosis was seven years if FR was intact, four years if TR was intact, and two years if TR was impaired, consistent with SOMI model predictions. The SOMI identified incipient dementia with excellent sensitivity and specificity.
Discussion
The SOMI model provides an efficient approach for clinical trial cognitive screening in advance of more costly biomarker studies and ultimately in clinical practice, and provides a vocabulary for understanding AD biomarker patterns and for re-analysis of existing clinical trial data.
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