Antihypertensive therapy was associated with a lower risk of cognitive impairment and AD. In particular, the use of calcium antagonists was associated with a decreased risk of cognitive impairment and AD independently of the blood pressure level, suggesting a specific neuroprotective effect of these antihypertensive agents.
In the present study, the socioeconomic impact of the use of the acetylcholinesterase inhibitor donepezil in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease (AD) living in France was examined. A model was created to extrapolate over a 3-year period the results from placebo-controlled trials together with epidemiological and prevalence data. Costs considered in the model were net societal costs associated with paid and unpaid assistance, general medical consumption and institutional care. The model suggested that delays in cognitive decline and functional dependence due to treatment reduced the time spent in institutional care and the burden on caregivers. Over a 3-year period, total net costs of caring for untreated patients with an initial Mini-Mental State Examination score ranging from 10 to 26 were EUR 53,206 compared with EUR 42,720 for a patient treated with donepezil – an annual cost saving of approximately EUR 3,500 per patient. Cost savings were mainly due to savings in unpaid caregiver time, which, apart from patient institutionalization, represented the most costly component of total care in this study but had no direct budgetary impact. Overall, these data suggest that donepezil is a cost-effective treatment for mild to moderately impaired AD patients living in France.
Hypertension is one of the principal risk factors for cerebrovascular diseases. Several epidemiologic studies have also indicated a positive correlation between cognitive decline or dementia and blood pressure level. Indeed, the results of most longitudinal studies show that cognitive functioning is often inversely proportional to blood pressure values measured 15 or 20 years previously. Cerebral infarcts, lacunae, and white matter changes are implicated in the pathogenesis of vascular dementia, but may also favor the development of Alzheimer's disease. Microcirculation disorders and endothelial dysfunctions are also advanced to explain the deterioration in cognitive functions in hypertensive subjects. Data from recent therapeutic trials open the way to the prevention of dementia (vascular or Alzheimer's type) by antihypertensive treatments and must be confirmed by other studies.
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