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Two painkillers
fail to slow Alzheimer's in study
By Keith Mulvihill
Last Updated: 2003-06-04
10:00:03 -0400 (Reuters Health)
NEW YORK (Reuters Health)
- Although a number of studies have suggested common
anti-inflammatory drugs may cut the risk of Alzheimer's disease, a
study out Tuesday shows that two such medications do not appear to
slow the disease's progression.
In the study, neither the
arthritis drug rofecoxib nor the over-the-counter painkiller
naproxen was able to slow mental decline in 351 patients with
mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's.
Rofecoxib, sold by Merck
as Vioxx, and naproxen, sold by Bayer as Aleve, are both
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, or NSAIDs. Inflammation is
believed to contribute to the brain damage that marks Alzheimer's,
and research has suggested that NSAID use might help ward off the
disease.
"We therefore were
hopeful that treatment with NSAIDs would slow the disease process,"
said Dr. Paul S. Aisen of Georgetown University Medical Center in
Washington D.C., the new study's lead author.
"Many thought that these
treatments would be effective," he told Reuters Health.
However, his team found
that after one year of treatment, neither rofecoxib nor naproxen
decreased the rate of patients' mental decline compared with
inactive treatment with a placebo.
"Disappointingly, this
trial indicates that these treatments are ineffective," Aisen said.
The findings are
published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Besides the medications'
apparent lack of benefit, Aisen noted that "these drugs carry risk."
In this study,
participants who took the drugs were more likely than placebo
patients to experience high blood pressure, dizziness, fatigue and
dry mouth. And well-established side effects of regular NSAID use
include stomach upset, ulcers and bleeding.
"We recommend that
individuals with Alzheimer's disease not take these drugs to treat
their disease," he advised.
Still, the study findings
don't mean that NSAID use won't possibly help other groups of
people, Dr. Lenore J. Launer of the National Institute on Aging in
Bethesda, Maryland, writes in an accompanying editorial.
"An at-risk population
with a family history of Alzheimer's disease is currently under
study as a part of the Alzheimer's Disease Anti-Inflammatory
Prevention Trial," she notes.
"Additional rigorous
trials and observational studies of NSAIDS will also help determine
whether NSAIDS might be candidate drugs for other populations at
risk for Alzheimer's disease," Launer adds.
Alzheimer's disease --
the most common type of dementia -- occurs when deposits known as
amyloid plaques accumulate in the brain. These deposits can start to
form many years before symptoms of dementia arise. It is thought
that inflammatory mechanisms contribute to the chain of events
leading to the build-up of these plaques, although study findings
have not been conclusive.
Copyright 2002 Reuters. |