Behavioral outcomes in clinical trials for Alzheimer disease

被引:0
|
作者
Ferris, SH
Mackell, JA
机构
关键词
Alzheimer disease; behavior; clinical trials; scales;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The use of behavioral scales is an important component in determining efficacy of new drugs in clinical trials for Alzheimer disease (AD). Behavioral assessment in clinical trials must be sensitive to disease heterogeneity, disease progression, and drug modification of behavior. Three such scales, the Behavior pathology in Alzheimer's Disease Rating Scale (BEHAVE-AD), the Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's Disease (CERAD) Behavior Rating Scale for Dementia (C-BRSD), and the Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory (CMAI), are useful in clinical trials. The BEHAVE-AD reliably assesses the severity of a range of AD symptoms (7 areas with 25 items) and rates behavioral impact on caregivers. The C-BRSD enables reliable assessment of the frequency of behaviors (8 areas with 48 items) in AD and monitors relevant behaviors throughout the course of the disease. However, it does nest assess the impact of behaviors on caregivers. The CMAI focuses on assessment of agitation and aggression and is compatible with C-BRSD but does not assess the impact of agitation on caregivers. A recent trial evaluated the C-BRSD and the CMAI in more than 300 AD and normal elderly individuals. Both of these scales discriminated between AD and non-AD patients, were sensitive across disease severity, and could track behavioral changes over 12 months of AD progression. The BEHAVE-AD, C-BRSD, and CMAI scales are valid, reliable, rapid to administer, cover relevant behaviors occurring during the course of the disease, and are appropriate for use in AD clinical trials.
引用
收藏
页码:S10 / S15
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Alzheimer’s Disease Clinical Trials: Changing the Paradigm
    Jeffrey L. Cummings
    Current Psychiatry Reports, 2011, 13 : 437 - 442
  • [42] BACE Inhibitor Clinical Trials for Alzheimer's Disease
    Watkins, Elyse A.
    Vassar, Robert
    JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE, 2024, 101 : S41 - S52
  • [43] Biomarkers as Endpoints in Clinical Trials for Alzheimer's Disease
    Elghanam, Yomna
    Purja, Sujata
    Kim, Eun Young
    JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE, 2024, 99 (02) : 693 - 703
  • [44] Power Calculations for Clinical Trials in Alzheimer's Disease
    Ard, M. Colin
    Edland, Steven D.
    JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE, 2011, 26 : 369 - 377
  • [45] Mixed Dementia in Clinical Trials of Alzheimer's Disease
    Massoud, Fadi
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2012, 39 (05) : 566 - 567
  • [46] Alzheimer's Disease Clinical Trials: Changing the Paradigm
    Cummings, Jeffrey L.
    CURRENT PSYCHIATRY REPORTS, 2011, 13 (06) : 437 - 442
  • [47] Clinical trials in Alzheimer's disease: a congress of prevention
    Ousset, P. J.
    CAHIERS DE L ANNEE GERONTOLOGIQUE, 2010, 2 (01): : 67 - 67
  • [48] Alzheimer's disease: clinical trials and drug development
    Mangialasche, Francesca
    Solomon, Alina
    Winblad, Bengt
    Mecocci, Patrizia
    Kivipelto, Miia
    LANCET NEUROLOGY, 2010, 9 (07): : 702 - 716
  • [49] The search for meaning in preclinical Alzheimer disease clinical trials
    Han, S. Duke
    Shinotoh, Hitoshi
    NEUROLOGY, 2019, 93 (04) : 139 - 140
  • [50] Iron Chelators and Alzheimer's Disease Clinical Trials
    Mandal, Pravat K.
    Maroon, Joseph C.
    Samkaria, Avantika
    Arora, Yashika
    Sharma, Shallu
    Pandey, Ashutosh
    JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE, 2024, 100 : S243 - S249