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13 May 2005. A mixed bag of epidemiologic studies alternatively hold up and knock down the promise that widely prescribed cholesterol-lowering statin drugs might offer some protection against Alzheimer disease progression (see ARF related news story). Laboratory studies showing that cholesterol or statins both can influence the production of Aβ (ARF related news story and ARF news story) have further piqued interest in prospective, controlled studies of statins for treating AD. Now, preliminary results of a small, placebo-controlled clinical trial using atorvastatin in people with mild to moderate AD should further encourage statin fans. The study, led by Larry Sparks at the Sun Health Research Institution in Sun City, Arizona, and just published in the May Archives of Neurology, produced significantly better scores on several measures of cognitive function in atorvastatin-treated patients compared to the placebo group. If these preliminary results hold up in larger, multicenter trials, atorvastatin may prove to be an effective therapy for AD, according to the authors, who report two larger studies are ongoing.
The pilot trial enrolled 67 people who took atorvastatin or placebo daily for a year. The participants were evaluated at baseline and then every 3 months with standard measures of cognitive function. The atorvastatin group did better in tests of cognitive function (ADAS-cog) and depression. At 12 months, none of the differences were significant, but the numbers indicated a trend toward higher scores on ADAS-cog, and two other clinical scales. As expected, the treated group had significantly lowered blood cholesterol.
Other newly published clinical data, this from the interrupted testing of Elan’s Aβ vaccine, slightly extends previously reported results. The treatment phase of the trial was stopped early when several participants developed encephalitis, but follow-up continued on the 300-odd patients who had already received one, two, or three doses of the vaccine. Two papers in the May 10 print edition of Neurology recap the trial results which were presented last summer at the 9th International Conference on Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders (see ARF related news story). One paper by Nick Fox at the Institute of Neurology in London and colleagues outlines the surprising and as yet unexplained results of MRI measurements showing that patients in the treatment group who responded to vaccine with antibody production experienced a decrease in brain size (see additional coverage from Sorrento). A second paper from Sid Gilman of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor and his coinvestigators found no significant differences when they compared the vaccine responders to nonresponders on a number of cognitive function tests. A battery of nine neuropsychological tests revealed only one significant difference, on one of the Wechsler memory tests. But analysis of scores across the entire series revealed significantly better composite scores for the responders compared to placebo. This result, and the observation that tau protein levels were decreased in antibody responders compared to the placebo group, suggests that the vaccine approach may prove useful, if toxicity issues can be addressed. The authors speculate that the encephalitis that halted the trials, an adverse event that was not seen in any of the preclinical animal models or safety tests, might have resulted from a change in formulation of the vaccine during a phase I trial. If so, the prospects for taming the vaccine to elicit the beneficial effects of amyloid removal without the immunological side effects would appear to be bright.—Pat McCaffrey.
References:
Sparks DL, Sabbagh MN, Connor DJ, Lopez J, Launer LJ, Browne P, Wasser D, Johnson-Traver S, Lochhead J, Ziolwolski C. Atorvastatin for the treatment of mild to moderate Alzheimer disease: preliminary results. Arch Neurol. 2005 May;62(5):753-7. Abstract
Fox NC, Black RS, Gilman S, Rossor MN, Griffith SG, Jenkins L, Koller M; AN1792(QS-21)-201 Study. Effects of Aβ immunization (AN1792) on MRI measures of cerebral volume in Alzheimer disease. Neurology. 2005 May 10;64(9):1563-72. Abstract
Gilman S, Koller M, Black RS, Jenkins L, Griffith SG, Fox NC, Eisner L, Kirby L, Rovira MB, Forette F, Orgogozo JM; AN1792(QS-21)-201 Study Team. Clinical effects of Aβ immunization (AN1792) in patients with AD in an interrupted trial. Neurology. 2005 May 10;64(9):1553-62. Abstract
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Comments on News and Primary Papers |
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Comment by: Tobias Hartmann
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Submitted 16 May 2005
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Posted 16 May 2005
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In response to the paper by Sparks et al.: Recently, several studies reported an absence of noticeable effects on cognition in treated AD patients. All of these studies had as a common denominator the use of low or moderate statin dosages, and for most of these studies treatment extended 3 months or less. Results were disappointing; apart from occasional indications of altered APP processing, no indications of altered cognitive performance were observed (1,2,3).
However, a study by Friedhof and Buxbaum with healthy volunteers already indicated that altering APP processing may require higher levels of statins in humans (4).
This was confirmed and extended by a pilot study (prospective, double blind, placebo-controlled) designed to evaluate whether cerebral Aβ levels respond to statin treatment (5). Following 6 months of high-level simvastatin treatment (80 mg), a significant drop in CSF Aβ was found in the statin-treated AD group. Potentially more important, the decline in MMSE performance was significantly reduced as compared to the placebo-treated group....
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In response to the paper by Sparks et al.: Recently, several studies reported an absence of noticeable effects on cognition in treated AD patients. All of these studies had as a common denominator the use of low or moderate statin dosages, and for most of these studies treatment extended 3 months or less. Results were disappointing; apart from occasional indications of altered APP processing, no indications of altered cognitive performance were observed (1,2,3).
However, a study by Friedhof and Buxbaum with healthy volunteers already indicated that altering APP processing may require higher levels of statins in humans (4).
This was confirmed and extended by a pilot study (prospective, double blind, placebo-controlled) designed to evaluate whether cerebral Aβ levels respond to statin treatment (5). Following 6 months of high-level simvastatin treatment (80 mg), a significant drop in CSF Aβ was found in the statin-treated AD group. Potentially more important, the decline in MMSE performance was significantly reduced as compared to the placebo-treated group. However, no difference in ADAS-cog was observed and the data indicated that patients in the moderate AD group profited less than those with mild AD from this experimental therapy. With the limited number of patients (20 statin-treated + 17 controls completed the trial), several questions where left open. Would moderate AD patients profit from longer treatment? Would other statins show similar effects? Most importantly, would other trials with a comparable design be able to repeat these findings?
Although the number of treated patients still remains low (26 statin-treated patients + 22 controls completed the trial), Larry Sparks et al. now present very informative answers to several of these questions:
- For a study of this size, the most careful way to approach the data might be to address the combined effect first. For this study, this provides a very clear answer. There is a profound trend in the statin-treated group to perform better than the placebo-treated patients.
- Although it is far too early to compare effectiveness of different statins, it becomes obvious that different statins, at least simvastatin and atorvastatin, apparently have a potential to reduce cognitive decline in AD patients.
- MMSE, ADAS-cog, and CGIC results indicate that treatment duration is important. Differences between the treated and placebo groups become apparent only after 6 months, but no differences were seen after 3 months. It is interesting in this respect that rodent data indicate that cholesterol turnover in the brain is very slow (approx. 4-6 months in rodents). Following the first 6 months, the decline appeared to follow the slope of the placebo-treated group. It will now be very important to break down the data into mild and moderate AD. However, the limited trial size may not permit the researchers to do so.
- In combination with the low/moderate dose trials, the two 80 mg AD trials indicate that the response is dose-dependent.
Taken together, one can only congratulate Larry Sparks et al. for this breakthrough. Nevertheless, one has to keep in mind that all of the above-mentioned studies are pilot trials designed to give direction, not to provide final answers. Of course, many open questions remain. The top three on my list are: Can we go below 80 mg when treatment is done for longer times? Would it help to treat AD patients earlier, as our pilot study indicated? Finally, if patients are treated as soon as the diagnosis becomes possible, would the remaining regenerative potential of the brain prevent further disease progression?
Fortunately, all of these questions can be addressed relative safely. Several studies are ongoing which, unlike the previous studies, are powered to answer these questions. It is the results of such studies that may allow us to eventually come to final conclusions regarding the use of statins in prevention and therapy of AD.
References:
1. Hoglund K, Wiklund O, Vanderstichele H, Eikenberg O, Vanmechelen E, Blennow K. Plasma levels of beta-amyloid(1-40), beta-amyloid(1-42), and total beta-amyloid remain unaffected in adult patients with hypercholesterolemia after treatment with statins.
Arch Neurol. 2004 Mar;61(3):333-7.
Abstract
2. Sjogren M, Gustafsson K, Syversen S, Olsson A, Edman A, Davidsson P, Wallin A, Blennow K. Treatment with simvastatin in patients with Alzheimer's disease lowers both alpha- and beta-cleaved amyloid precursor protein.
Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord. 2003;16(1):25-30.
Abstract
3. Ishii K, Tokuda T, Matsushima T, Miya F, Shoji S, Ikeda S, Tamaoka A. Pravastatin at 10 mg/day does not decrease plasma levels of either amyloid-beta (Abeta) 40 or Abeta 42 in humans.
Neurosci Lett. 2003 Oct 30;350(3):161-4.
Abstract
4. Buxbaum JD, Cullen EI, Friedhoff LT. Pharmacological concentrations of the HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor lovastatin decrease the formation of the Alzheimer beta-amyloid peptide in vitro and in patients.
Front Biosci. 2002 Apr 1;7:a50-9.
Abstract
5. Simons M, Schwarzler F, Lutjohann D, von Bergmann K, Beyreuther K, Dichgans J, Wormstall H, Hartmann T, Schulz JB. Treatment with simvastatin in normocholesterolemic patients with Alzheimer's disease: A 26-week randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial.
Ann Neurol. 2002 Sep;52(3):346-50.
Abstract
View all comments by Tobias Hartmann
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Comment by: Dominic Walsh, ARF Advisor
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Submitted 16 May 2005
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Posted 16 May 2005
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The analysis of a subset of patients for whom CSF samples were available before and after production of anti-Aβ antibodies suggests that successful immunization with Aβ may retard further neurodegeneration. Although the number of patients studied is very small, the veracity of these findings is supported by recent animal modeling studies from the laboratories of Frank La Ferla and Karen Ashe. View all comments by Dominic Walsh
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Comment by: Benjamin Wolozin, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
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Submitted 17 May 2005
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Posted 17 May 2005
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This week marks publication of a provocative study by Sparks et al. (Sparks et al., 2005). This study suggests that treatment with atorvastatin reduces the progression of Alzheimer disease (AD) in subjects with mild to moderate forms of the disease. The results show benefits that are statistically significant in multiple categories, including ADAS-COG, GDS, and activities of daily living. In many ways, the results observed by Sparks et al. reproduce results observed in a study reported by Simons et al. three years ago, where they treated patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer disease with simvastatin and observed significant reductions in β amyloid levels and significant decrease in the rate of cognitive loss (Simons et al., 2002). These two small studies both provide evidence that statins can prevent the decline in cognitive function in subjects with mild to moderate Alzheimer disease.
The positive results observed by Sparks and Simons contrast sharply with the negative results reported by the PROSPER study and the Heart Study Group (Shepherd et al., 2002; Group...
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This week marks publication of a provocative study by Sparks et al. (Sparks et al., 2005). This study suggests that treatment with atorvastatin reduces the progression of Alzheimer disease (AD) in subjects with mild to moderate forms of the disease. The results show benefits that are statistically significant in multiple categories, including ADAS-COG, GDS, and activities of daily living. In many ways, the results observed by Sparks et al. reproduce results observed in a study reported by Simons et al. three years ago, where they treated patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer disease with simvastatin and observed significant reductions in β amyloid levels and significant decrease in the rate of cognitive loss (Simons et al., 2002). These two small studies both provide evidence that statins can prevent the decline in cognitive function in subjects with mild to moderate Alzheimer disease.
The positive results observed by Sparks and Simons contrast sharply with the negative results reported by the PROSPER study and the Heart Study Group (Shepherd et al., 2002; Group 2002). For simplicity, I will refer to the studies by Sparks et al. and Simons et al. as "Alzheimer studies," and I will refer to the studies for PROSPER and Heart Study Group as "cardiovascular," although I am aware that the cardiovascular studies had a significant neurologic component. The cardiovascular studies were originally designed to examine the effects of statins on the incidence of cardiovascular disease, and the investigators added on a cognitive component to examine whether statins might also influence the incidence of Alzheimer disease. The seemingly contradictory results among the cardiovascular studies and the Alzheimer studies raise important questions that beg resolution. While we do not currently know the reason for the contradictory results, these studies differ in important respects, which could provide important clues for future and current studies testing the efficacy of statins in AD.
The subject populations differed greatly between the cardiovascular studies (PROSPER and the Heart Study Group) and the Alzheimer studies (Sparks et al. and Simons et al.). The cardiovascular studies were truly massive studies, one with ~9,000 subjects initially (2,891 treated with pravastatin) and the other with ~20,000 subjects initially (~10,000 treated with simvastatin). In comparison, the two Alzheimer studies were small. The study by Sparks examined 56 subjects (25 treated subjects completing the study), while the study by Simons examined 37 subjects (17 treated) (Sparks et al., 2005; Simons et al., 2002). However, the actual number of Alzheimer cases studied in each group was surprisingly similar. Only 31 subjects (0.3 percent) of the subjects in the Heart PROSPER Study were characterized as having Alzheimer disease, and the PROSPER study did not specifically list people with the diagnosis of Alzheimer disease (Shepherd et al., 2002; Group 2002).
The differing numbers of patients among the two types of studies reflect an important conceptual difference between the cardiovascular and Alzheimer studies. The study by Sparks et al. sought to measure progression of AD. Because of the focus on progression of symptoms, Sparks and colleagues designed their study to carefully quantify cognitive function among the study participants. The Simons study also quantified progression of cognitive loss in Alzheimer subjects, although the level of detail was far less than that documented by Sparks and colleagues. By contrast, the cardiovascular studies did not strongly address the issue of Alzheimer disease. The PROSPER study looked at cognitive decline among the entire cohort of subjects, which is a general measure that does not specifically address the pathophysiology of Alzheimer disease. It is possible that any effect relevant to Alzheimer disease was lost among the signal of other factors contributing to cognitive decline. The Heart Study Group examined the incidence of Alzheimer disease rather than progression of the disease. Because of this objective, the cardiovascular studies simply assessed whether there was dementia, which is a binary "yes/no" measure. I believe that if the results of Sparks et al. are borne out by future studies, the distinction between looking at progression of cognitive loss in Alzheimer cases, rather than incidence of Alzheimer disease or cognitive loss in the general population, will be key factors.
A second important difference might lie in dosing; I have heard other investigators mention this as a significant consideration. I do not know how important this issue is, but it is well worth considering. The cardiovascular studies utilized doses of statins that were at the moderate end of the recommended doses (up to 40 mg QD of simvastatin or pravastatin). In contrast, Sparks and colleagues used dosing that is on the moderate to high end (40/80 mg) of recommended dosing. This difference could have important consequences. Studies by Sparks et al., Friedhoff et al., Simons et al., and Hogland et al. have all examined the effects of statins on Aβ levels (Sparks et al., 2005; Friedhoff et al., 2001; Hoglund et al., 2004; Simons et al., 2002). Sparks used a relatively high dose of atorvastatin (40/80 mg QD) and has reported at meetings a dose-dependent reduction in Aβ. Friedhoff used a high dose of slow release lovastatin, and observed a reduction in Aβ levels associated with statin use (Friedhoff et al., 2001). In contrast, Hoglund et al. used doses of statins on the lower end of the recommended range (20 mg atorvastatin QD or 40 mg simvastatin QD) and failed to observe a reduction of Aβ levels with statin use (Simons et al., 2002). The confusing aspect of this issue is that Simons and colleagues also used 40 mg QD of simvastatin and observed a reduction in Aβ. Although not entirely consistent, these results raise the possibility that higher levels of statins might exert effects relevant to AD not observed with lower doses of statins. If true, use of lower doses of statins might also contribute to the negative outcome of the cardiovascular studies with respect to prevention of Alzheimer disease. However, this argument is quite tenuous.
It is possible that the small sample sizes of the Sparks and Simons studies contributed to false positive results. However, it is also possible that the results from both the cardiovascular studies and the Alzheimer studies are real. How could this be? Perhaps statins reduce the progression of AD, but do not prevent the incidence of AD and also do not prevent other forms of dementia. Our current knowledge of the pathophysiology of AD does not provide a clear mechanism for distinguishing between processes that might occur earlier in the disease process, and be associated with incidence of AD, from those that occur later in the disease and be associated with progression of existing disease. However, these studies might be identifying just such a distinction.
References:
Friedhoff LT, Cullen EI, Geoghagen NS, Buxbaum JD. Treatment with controlled-release lovastatin decreases serum concentrations of human beta-amyloid (A beta) peptide.
Int J Neuropsychopharmacol. 2001 Jun;4(2):127-30. Abstract
Heart Protection Study Group. MRC/BHF Heart Protection Study of cholesterol lowering with simvastatin in 20,536 high-risk individuals: a randomised placebo-controlled trial. Lancet. 2002 Jul 6;360(9326):7-22. Abstract
Hoglund K, Wiklund O, Vanderstichele H, Eikenberg O, Vanmechelen E and Blennow K. Plasma Levels of Beta-Amyloid(1-40), Beta-Amyloid(1-42), and Total Beta-Amyloid Remain Unaffected in Adult Patients With Hypercholesterolemia After Treatment With Statins. Arch Neurol. 2004 Mar;61(3):333-7. Abstract
Shepherd J, Blauw GJ, Murphy MB, Bollen EL, Buckley BM, Cobbe SM, Ford I, Gaw A, Hyland M, Jukema JW, Kamper AM, Macfarlane PW, Meinders AE, Norrie J, Packard CJ, Perry IJ, Stott DJ, Sweeney BJ, Twomey C, Westendorp RG; PROSPER study group. PROspective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk. Pravastatin in elderly individuals at risk of vascular disease (PROSPER): a randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 2002 Nov 23;360(9346):1623-30. Abstract
Simons M, Schwarzler F, Lutjohann D, von Bergmann K, Beyreuther K, Dichgans J, Wormstall H, Hartmann T, Schulz JB. Treatment with simvastatin in normocholesterolemic patients with Alzheimer's disease: A 26-week randomized, placebo-controlled, double- blind trial. Ann Neurol. 2002 Sep;52(3):346-50. Abstract
Sparks DL, Sabbagh MN, Connor DJ, Lopez J, Launer LJ, Browne P, Wasser D, Johnson-Traver S, Lochhead J, Ziolwolski C. Atorvastatin for the Treatment of Mild to Moderate Alzheimer Disease: Preliminary Results. Arch Neurol. 2005 May;62(5):753-7. Abstract
View all comments by Benjamin Wolozin
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Comment by: Tobias Hartmann
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Submitted 18 May 2005
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Posted 19 May 2005
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Just a quick note on dosing in the statin studies. The Simons study used 80 mg simvastatin; 40 mg were used for the first month, then patients were put to 80 mg. One reason for doing this was that at the time the study was initiated, the use of 80 mg simvastatin was rather new and we anticipated that it would be safer to start with a lower dose. By now, it appears that this was an overly cautious procedure.
This puts the dosing of the Alzheimer sudies, which found a beneficial cognitive response in a distinct group, using at least twice the statin amount than other studies which did not observe a beneficial effect. Ben Wolozin very importantly raises the point of lower doses in respect to "beneficial side effects" and to prevention.
View all comments by Tobias Hartmann
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Comment by: Anne Fagan, ARF Advisor
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Submitted 19 May 2005
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Posted 23 May 2005
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In this recent paper, Sparks and colleagues have reported encouraging preliminary data showing a beneficial effect of statin treatment on cognitive decline due to probable AD. Suggestions of a link between cholesterol metabolism and AD have come from many scientific arenas over the years, but have yet to be fully elucidated. Results from epidemiological studies have shown an association between hypercholesterolemia and AD, but the data have been mixed (Jarvik et al., 1995; Kalmijn et al., 1997; Kuo et al., 1998; Notkola et al., 1998; Romas et al., 1999). The initial retrospective studies showing reduced AD/dementia risk with statin use were very provocative (Jick et al., 2000; Wolozin et al., 2000); however, results from more recent prospective studies of statin use have been mixed (Group, 2002; Shepherd et al., 2002; Sparks et al., 2005). Clearly, many variables can contribute to the outcome of such studies, including clinical characteristics of the patient population, specific statin, dosage and length of treatment, clinical and biological outcome measures, and so on. Results...
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In this recent paper, Sparks and colleagues have reported encouraging preliminary data showing a beneficial effect of statin treatment on cognitive decline due to probable AD. Suggestions of a link between cholesterol metabolism and AD have come from many scientific arenas over the years, but have yet to be fully elucidated. Results from epidemiological studies have shown an association between hypercholesterolemia and AD, but the data have been mixed (Jarvik et al., 1995; Kalmijn et al., 1997; Kuo et al., 1998; Notkola et al., 1998; Romas et al., 1999). The initial retrospective studies showing reduced AD/dementia risk with statin use were very provocative (Jick et al., 2000; Wolozin et al., 2000); however, results from more recent prospective studies of statin use have been mixed (Group, 2002; Shepherd et al., 2002; Sparks et al., 2005). Clearly, many variables can contribute to the outcome of such studies, including clinical characteristics of the patient population, specific statin, dosage and length of treatment, clinical and biological outcome measures, and so on. Results from animal studies demonstrating alterations in AD-related pathology in response to high-fat diets or cholesterol-lowering drugs are compelling (Howland et al., 1998; Refolo et al., 2000; Fassbender et al., 2001; Refolo et al., 2001), and the in vitro data showing cholesterol effects on Aβ generation provide a plausible mechanistic explanation (Simons et al., 1998; Frears et al., 1999; Fassbender et al., 2001).
The preliminary findings described in the current paper are certainly promising in terms of identifying a possible clinical therapy, but the mechanism of action remains to be defined. The pleiotrophic effects of statins, including inflammatory and vascular effects, could conceivably impact AD pathogenesis. The authors themselves acknowledge the possibility of a non-cholesterol-lowering mechanism for the observed effect on cognition. In terms of the possible Aβ connection, it would be interesting to know if CSF and/or plasma levels of Aβ in their cohort were altered with statin use, comparing levels at study entry with levels at the time of study completion. This would provide some insight into effects on Aβ metabolism as a possible mechanism of action.
Despite the abundant literature suggesting a connection between cholesterol metabolism and AD-related processes, I am still not convinced that the effects of hypercholesterolemia or statin use on cognitive or biological (e.g., plaque load, Aβ levels) outcomes involve cholesterol per se. We recently reported a lack of effect of endogenous plasma cholesterol levels on brain Aβ levels and pathology in the PDAPP mouse model of AD (Fagan et al., 2004). We wanted to test the role of plasma cholesterol levels on Aβ pathology in this model without resorting to the use of non-physiologic high-fat diets (known to cause pathology in multiple systems) or pharmacologic manipulations with drugs with possible pleiotrophic effects (e.g., statins). To do this, we took a genetic approach and bred PDAPP mice with mice lacking ApoA1. ApoA1-null mice have severely reduced plasma cholesterol levels (by ~75 percent) due to the virtual absence of HDL, the primary lipoprotein in mice. Despite a marked reduction in plasma (and brain, ~40 percent) cholesterol levels in PDAPP/ApoA1-/- mice, Aβ-related parameters were not changed. Furthermore, while plasma ApoE levels actually increased in PDAPP/ApoA1-/- mice compared to littermate controls, brain ApoE levels remained unchanged. We hypothesized that it is perhaps the level of brain ApoE, and not the level of brain or plasma cholesterol per se that influences Aβ metabolism, and by extension, perhaps dementia risk. In view of the published literature, it is conceivable that effects of high-fat diets and statin treatment previously attributed to cholesterol may actually be due to altered levels of brain ApoE. High-fat diets not only increase the level of cholesterol, but also ApoE, in the brain (Sparks et al., 1995; Howland et al., 1998; Wu et al., 2003), and statins decrease them both (Naidu et al., 2002; Petanceska et al., 2003). Thus, it has not been possible to distinguish putative effects of cholesterol from those of ApoE in the many studies published to date. Does this mechanistic nuance have any bearing on whether statins will have therapeutic value in AD? No, probably not. Consideration of this alternative hypothesis does, however, open up the possibility of additional targets (e.g., ApoE) that warrant exploration, and cautions against an automatic presumption of a cholesterol mechanism in the hypercholesterolemia/statin/AD connection.
References:
Fagan A, Christopher E, Taylor J, Parsadanian M, Spinner M, Watson M, Fryer J, Wahrle S, Bales K, Paul S, Holtzman D. ApoAI deficiency results in marked reductions in plasma cholesterol but no alterations in amyloid-beta pathology in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease-like cerebral amyloidosis.
Am J Pathol. 2004 Oct;165(4):1413-22.
Abstract
Fassbender K, Simons M, Bergmann C, Stroick M, Lutjohann D, Keller P, Runz H, Kuhl S, Bertsch T, Von Bergmann K, Hennerici M, Beyreuther K, Hartmann T. Simvastatin strongly reduces levels of Alzheimer's disease beta -amyloid peptides Abeta 42 and Abeta 40 in vitro and in vivo.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001 May 8;98(10):5856-61. Epub 2001 Apr 10.
Abstract
Frears E, Stephens D, Walters C, Davies H, Austen B. The role of cholesterol in the biosynthesis of beta-amyloid.
Neuroreport. 1999 Jun 3;10(8):1699-705.
Abstract
Heart Protection Study Collaborative Group. MRC/BHF Heart Protection Study of cholesterol lowering with simvastatin in 20,536 high-risk individuals: a randomised placebo-controlled trial.
Lancet. 2002 Jul 6;360(9326):7-22. Abstract
Howland D, Trusko S, Savage M, Reaume A, Lang D, Hirsch J, Maeda N, Siman R, Greenberg B, Scott R, Flood D. Modulation of secreted beta-amyloid precursor protein and amyloid beta-peptide in brain by cholesterol.
J Biol Chem. 1998 Jun 26;273(26):16576-82.
Abstractc
Jarvik J, Wijsman E, Kukull W, Schellenberg G, Yu C, Larson E. Interactions of apolipoprotein E genotype, total cholesterol level, age, and sex in prediction of Alzheimer's disease: a case-control study.
Neurology. 1995 Jun;45(6):1092-6.
Abstract
Jick H, Zornberg G, Jick S, Seshadri S, Drachman D. Statins and the risk of dementia.
Lancet. 2000 Nov 11;356(9242):1627-31. Erratum in: Lancet 2001 Feb 17;357(9255):562.
Abstract
Kalmijn S, Launer L, Ott A, Witteman J, Hofman A, Breteler M. Dietary fat intake and the risk of incident dementia in the Rotterdam Study.
Ann Neurol. 1997 Nov;42(5):776-82.
Abstract
Kuo Y, Emmerling M, Bisgaier C, Essenburg A, Lampert H, Drumm D, Roher A. Elevated low-density lipoprotein in Alzheimer's disease correlates with brain Abeta 1-42 levels.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 1998 Nov 27;252(3):711-5.
Abstract
Naidu A, Xu Q, Catalano R, Cordell B. Secretion of apolipoprotein E by brain glia requires protein prenylation and is suppressed by statins.
Brain Res. 2002 Dec 20;958(1):100-11.
Abstract
Notkola I, Sulkava R, Pekkanen J, Erkinjuntti T, Ehnholm C, Kivinen P, Tuomilehto J, Nissinen A. Serum total cholesterol, apolipoprotein E epsilon 4 allele, and Alzheimer's disease.
Neuroepidemiology. 1998;17(1):14-20.
Abstract
Petanceska S, Papolla M, Refolo L. (2003) Modulation of Alzheimer's amyloidosis by statins: Mechanisms of action. Curr Med Chem-Immun, Endoc & Metab Agents 3:233-243.
Refolo L, Pappolla M, Malester B, LaFrancois J, Bryant-Thomas T, Wang R, Tint G, Sambamurti K, Duff K. Hypercholesterolemia accelerates the Alzheimer's amyloid pathology in a transgenic mouse model.
Neurobiol Dis. 2000 Aug;7(4):321-31. Erratum in: Neurobiol Dis 2000 Dec;7(6 Pt B):690.
Abstract
Refolo L, Pappolla M, LaFrancois J, Malester B, Schmidt S, Thomas-Bryant T, Tint G, Wang R, Mercken M, Petanceska S, Duff K. A cholesterol-lowering drug reduces beta-amyloid pathology in a transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer's disease.
Neurobiol Dis. 2001 Oct;8(5):890-9.
Abstract
Romas S, Tang M, Berglund L, Mayeux R. ApoE genotype, plasma lipids, lipoproteins, and AD in community elderly.
Neurology. 1999 Aug 11;53(3):517-21.
Abstract
Shepherd J, Blauw G, Murphy M, Bollen E, Buckley B, Cobbe S, Ford I, Gaw A, Hyland M, Jukema J, Kamper A, Macfarlane P, Meinders A, Norrie J, Packard C, Perry I, Stott D, Sweeney B, Twomey C, Westendorp R. Pravastatin in elderly individuals at risk of vascular disease (PROSPER): a randomized controlled trial.
Lancet. 2002 Nov 23;360(9346):1623-30.
Abstract
Simons M, Keller P, De Strooper B, Beyreuther K, Dotti C. Cholesterol depletion inhibits the generation of beta-amyloid in hippocampal neurons.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1998 May 26;95(11):6460-4.
Abstract
Sparks D, Liu H, Gross D, Scheff S. Increased density of cortical apolipoprotein E immunoreactive neurons in rabbit brain after dietary administration of cholesterol.
Neurosci Lett. 1995 Mar 3;187(2):142-4.
Abstract
Sparks D, Sabbagh M, Connor D, Lopez J, Launer L, Browne P, Wasser D, Johnson-Traver S, Lochhead J, Ziolwolski C. Atorvastatin for the treatment of mild to moderate Alzheimer disease: preliminary results.
Arch Neurol. 2005 May;62(5):753-7.
Abstract
Wolozin B, Kellman W, Ruosseau P, Celesia G, Siegel G. Decreased prevalence of Alzheimer disease associated with 3-hydroxy-3-methyglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors.
Arch Neurol. 2000 Oct;57(10):1439-43.
Abstract
Wu C, Liao P, Lin C, Kuo C, Chen S, Chen H, Kuo Y. Brain region-dependent increases in beta-amyloid and apolipoprotein E levels in hypercholesterolemic rabbits.
J Neural Transm. 2003 Jun;110(6):641-9.
Abstract
View all comments by Anne Fagan
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Comment by: Sarah L. Cole, Robert Vassar, ARF Advisor
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Submitted 25 May 2005
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Posted 25 May 2005
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Recent epidemiological studies (Jick et al., 2000; Wolozin et al., 2000; Heart Protection Study Group, 2002; Shepherd et al., 2002; Zandi et al., 2005) have led to contradictory conclusions regarding the efficacy of statin treatment for AD. As Dr. Wolozin points out in his commentary, it may be that statins reduce AD progression, rather than decrease disease incidence. In support of this, the double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized pilot trial by Sparks et al. offers some intriguing findings, suggesting that statins may be of some benefit in reducing dementia progression in both mild and moderate AD patients (Sparks et al., 2005). A significant benefit of atorvastatin treatment for 12 months was observed for GDS score, and trends toward significant differences for ADAS-cog, CGIC, and NPI were seen between the atorvastatin and placebo-groups, although significance was not obtained for MMSE or ADCS-ADL scores.
It is widely believed that the potential beneficial effects of statin treatment as an AD therapeutic are related to the cholesterol-lowering properties of statins....
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Recent epidemiological studies (Jick et al., 2000; Wolozin et al., 2000; Heart Protection Study Group, 2002; Shepherd et al., 2002; Zandi et al., 2005) have led to contradictory conclusions regarding the efficacy of statin treatment for AD. As Dr. Wolozin points out in his commentary, it may be that statins reduce AD progression, rather than decrease disease incidence. In support of this, the double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized pilot trial by Sparks et al. offers some intriguing findings, suggesting that statins may be of some benefit in reducing dementia progression in both mild and moderate AD patients (Sparks et al., 2005). A significant benefit of atorvastatin treatment for 12 months was observed for GDS score, and trends toward significant differences for ADAS-cog, CGIC, and NPI were seen between the atorvastatin and placebo-groups, although significance was not obtained for MMSE or ADCS-ADL scores.
It is widely believed that the potential beneficial effects of statin treatment as an AD therapeutic are related to the cholesterol-lowering properties of statins. However, whether benefit is mediated through changes in serum or brain cholesterol, or whether the effects are direct (e.g., lower brain cholesterol causing reduced Aβ generation) or indirect (e.g., lower serum cholesterol causing improved cerebrovascular function, thus reducing AD progression) remains unknown. As Drs. Gandy and Petanceska point out in their commentary, lipophilic statins such as simvastatin penetrate the blood-brain barrier (BBB), whereas hydrophilic statins such as atorvastatin do not. Interestingly, Simons et al. reported a 26-week randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial using simvastatin that showed a significant benefit in the MMSE scores of the simvastatin treated group as compared to placebo (Simons et al., 2002). As anticipated, statin treatment in both Sparks and Simons trials significantly lowered plasma cholesterol levels, and in the Simons study, cerebral cholesterol metabolism was also affected following treatment. It is interesting to note that both trials showed statin-related cognitive benefits, although one used a BBB-penetrant statin while the other did not. This would seem to support the notion that the beneficial effect was associated with lower serum, rather than brain, cholesterol levels. As discussed by Drs. Wolozin and Hartmann, use of high-dose simvastatin was also associated with reduced Aβ levels (Simons et al., 2002). However, whether or not atorvastatin treatment affected either cerebral cholesterol or Aβ levels (or both) was not determined in the Sparks study, and the mechanisms underlying the potential benefits of statins on measures of cognition remain a mystery.
Given the relatively short time frame of both the Sparks and Simons trials, it should be considered that any putative beneficial effects that the statins exert may be entirely independent of changes in amyloid load and could instead be a secondary effect due to an improvement in cardiovascular or cerebrovascular function. Indeed, recent data has indicated that atorvastatin treatment promotes both angiogenesis and neuronal plasticity (Chen et al., 2005). Obviously, further trials involving the use of statins of different lipophilicity, over a range of doses for more prolonged periods, are required to obtain definitive results.
In light of the relatively short trial time, and given the fact that stroke benefit from statins is not apparent until ~3 years of treatment (Byington et al., 2001; Pedersen et al., 1998), increasing the trial time beyond 1 year may reveal more robust positive effects on AD progression. However, a note of caution: Although a ~5-year administration of high-dose atorvastatin (similar to the dosage used by Sparks) to patients with stable coronary heart disease provided significant clinical benefit beyond that afforded by 10 mg per day atorvastatin, this benefit occurred with a greater incidence of elevated aminotransferase levels (LaRosa, et al., 2005). While Sparks and colleagues screened for adverse changes in liver function and monitored for muscle derangements and rhabdomyolysis following administration of 80 mg per day atorvastatin, it remains unclear as to why, out of the 63 patients considered evaluable after completing the 3-month visit, only 46 individuals completed the 12-month study.
In summary, while not all the large-scale epidemiologic studies have found a link between statin use and AD prevention, the small-scale, randomized clinical trial of Sparks et al. appears to support the notion that statin treatment may reduce AD progression. However, given the small sample sizes of both the Sparks and the Simons studies, the data from well-designed, large-scale multicenter clinical trials clarifying the safety and efficacy of long-term, high-dose statin treatment on AD progression is avidly awaited.
References:
Jick H, Zornberg GL, Jick SS, Seshadri S, Drachman DA. Statins and the risk of dementia.
Lancet. 2000 Nov 11;356(9242):1627-31. Erratum in: Lancet 2001 Feb 17;357(9255):562. Abstract
Wolozin B, Kellman W, Ruosseau P, Celesia GG, Siegel G. Decreased prevalence of Alzheimer disease associated with 3-hydroxy-3-methyglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors. Arch Neurol. 2000 Oct;57(10):1439-43. Abstract
Heart Protection Study Group. MRC/BHF Heart Protection Study of cholesterol lowering with simvastatin in 20,536 high-risk individuals: a randomised placebo-controlled trial. Lancet. 2002 Jul 6;360(9326):7-22. Abstract
Shepherd J, Blauw GJ, Murphy MB, Bollen EL, Buckley BM, Cobbe SM, Ford I, Gaw A, Hyland M, Jukema JW, Kamper AM, Macfarlane PW, Meinders AE, Norrie J, Packard CJ, Perry IJ, Stott DJ, Sweeney BJ, Twomey C, Westendorp RG; PROSPER study group. PROspective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk. Pravastatin in elderly individuals at risk of vascular disease (PROSPER): a randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 2002 Nov 23;360(9346):1623-30. Abstract
Zandi PP, Sparks DL, Khachaturian AS, Tschanz J, Norton M, Steinberg M, Welsh-Bohmer KA, Breitner JC; Cache County Study investigators. Do statins reduce risk of incident dementia and Alzheimer disease? The Cache County Study. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2005 Feb;62(2):217-24. Abstract
Sparks DL, Sabbagh MN, Connor DJ, Lopez J, Launer LJ, Browne P, Wasser D, Johnson-Traver S, Lochhead J, Ziolwolski C. Atorvastatin for the treatment of mild to moderate Alzheimer disease: preliminary results. Arch Neurol. 2005 May;62(5):753-7. Abstract
Simons M, Schwarzler F, Lutjohann D, von Bergmann K, Beyreuther K, Dichgans J, Wormstall H, Hartmann T, Schulz JB. Treatment with simvastatin in normocholesterolemic patients with Alzheimer's disease: A 26-week randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial. Ann Neurol. 2002 Sep;52(3):346-50. Abstract
Chen J, Zhang C, Jiang H, Li Y, Zhang L, Robin A, Katakowski M, Lu M, Chopp M. Atorvastatin induction of VEGF and BDNF promotes brain plasticity after stroke in mice. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 2005 Feb;25(2):281-90. Abstract
Byington RP, Davis BR, Plehn JF, White HD, Baker J, Cobbe SM, Shepherd J. Reduction of stroke events with pravastatin: the Prospective Pravastatin Pooling (PPP) Project.
Circulation. 2001 Jan 23;103(3):387-92. Abstract
Pedersen TR, Kjekshus J, Pyorala K, Olsson AG, Cook TJ, Musliner TA, Tobert JA, Haghfelt T. Effect of simvastatin on ischemic signs and symptoms in the Scandinavian simvastatin survival study (4S). Am J Cardiol. 1998 Feb 1;81(3):333-5. Abstract
LaRosa JC, Grundy SM, Waters DD, Shear C, Barter P, Fruchart JC, Gotto AM, Greten H, Kastelein JJ, Shepherd J, Wenger NK; Treating to New Targets (TNT) Investigators. Intensive lipid lowering with atorvastatin in patients with stable coronary disease. N Engl J Med. 2005 Apr 7;352(14):1425-35. Epub 2005 Mar 8. Abstract
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Comment by: Larry Sparks
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Submitted 7 June 2005
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Posted 7 June 2005
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I must start by saying that it is quite gratifying that there has been such interest in our clinical trial (AD Cholesterol-Lowering Treatment—ADCLT trial; the Lipitor trial) (1). As the very first AD treatment trial testing a statin medication for clinical benefit, other shorter investigations were initiated and completed during the course of the ADCLT, including the Simons study. We initiated our study cognizant of many mechanisms by which atorvastatin could produce clinical benefit in AD, but deemed it more important to demonstrate clinical efficacy and argue over mechanism later. We now have shown clinical benefit, and discussions of the mechanism are clearly warranted. We, of course, respect and acknowledge each investigator’s opinion as to the mechanism of atorvastatin action, but must clarify certain issues and correct some factual errors.
As noted by Dr. Hartman, the Simons study was a 26-week study of simvastatin where stable performance on the Mini Mental State Exam (MMSE) in the treatment group was significantly different from the placebo group. This was...
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I must start by saying that it is quite gratifying that there has been such interest in our clinical trial (AD Cholesterol-Lowering Treatment—ADCLT trial; the Lipitor trial) (1). As the very first AD treatment trial testing a statin medication for clinical benefit, other shorter investigations were initiated and completed during the course of the ADCLT, including the Simons study. We initiated our study cognizant of many mechanisms by which atorvastatin could produce clinical benefit in AD, but deemed it more important to demonstrate clinical efficacy and argue over mechanism later. We now have shown clinical benefit, and discussions of the mechanism are clearly warranted. We, of course, respect and acknowledge each investigator’s opinion as to the mechanism of atorvastatin action, but must clarify certain issues and correct some factual errors.
As noted by Dr. Hartman, the Simons study was a 26-week study of simvastatin where stable performance on the Mini Mental State Exam (MMSE) in the treatment group was significantly different from the placebo group. This was because the placebo group showed a somewhat accelerated 4-point deterioration between baseline and the 6-month evaluation. At the 6-month time-point in the ADCLT, we observed stable performance on the MMSE in the atorvastatin-treated population that was not significantly different from the placebo group—as the placebo group only deteriorated two points. The differences between the studies on the MMSE are more due to the rate of deterioration in untreated participants with AD.
Dr. Wolozin indicates that we reported a significant difference on the Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study Activities of Daily Living (ADCS-ADL) index, when in fact this was the one of six clinical instruments where there was no positive signal produced by atorvastatin. This investigator suggests that the Simons trial and the ADCLT were of similar size when actually the ADCLT included twice as many subjects with mild to moderate AD. We include data from 63 participants—32 on atorvastatin and 31 placebo with 25 treated subjects completing the 1-year investigation, whereas the Simons study included 37 subjects, with 13 of 17 simvastatin-treated subjects completing the 6-month study. Dr. Wolozin also suggests that we have reported a dose-related decrease in circulating Aβ levels with atorvastatin treatment, when in fact we have found slight gradual increases in both Aβ40 and 42 that were not significant. These data will be published in the near future (2).
We agree with Drs. Gandy and Petanceska that atorvastatin may partially reinstate clearance of Aβ from the brain. The observed gradual increase in circulating Aβ levels among subjects treated with atorvastatin may be associated with the gradual reductions of ceruloplasmin—the copper chaperone in the blood. We have shown that increased copper/ceruloplasmin levels promote central accumulation of Aβ in the cholesterol-fed rabbit model of AD, while reduced circulating copper/ceruloplasmin allows clearance to the blood and minimal accumulation in brain (3-5).
In reply to Dr. Fagan, as part of the preplanned design of the ADCLT, we explored many more circulating markers than initially published to assess multiple mechanistic avenues. As noted above, we have determined the effect of atorvastatin treatment on Aβ levels. We have also established that atorvastatin produces reduced circulating ApoE levels during the time-course of treatment (2). I would also note that in addition to cholesterol-fed animals, nondemented individuals with autopsy-confirmed critical coronary artery disease (>75 percent stenosis) exhibit increased accumulation of Aβ and ApoE in the brain (6-8), thus making it difficult to separate the interrelationships among cholesterol, ApoE and Aβ.
In answer to Dr. Cole's and Dr. Vassar's queries, as part of the investigation of possible mechanisms of atorvastatin action in association with observed clinical benefit, we will soon report the effect of treatment on circulating free radical load (superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase activities) and HDL/LDL/VLDL levels (9). In addition, we will be reporting the effect of active treatment on volumetric alterations measured by MRI, assessment of clinical parameters during the 1-year “open-label" extension of the ADCLT (Geneva/Springfield Conference, 2006), and treatment-related changes in circulating levels of ApoA1, ApoB, copper, 24OH- and 27OH-cholesterol, CRP, and CD40. Furthermore, in two weeks we will be reporting at the Alzheimer’s Association meeting in Washington, DC, the influence of initial cognitive impairment, initial cholesterol levels, and ApoE genotype on the clinical benefit produced by atorvastatin.
References:
1. Sparks DL, Sabbagh MN, Connor DJ, Lopez J, Launer LJ, Browne P, Wasser D, Johnson-Traver S, Lochhead J, Ziolwolski C. Atorvastatin for the treatment of mild to moderate Alzheimer disease: preliminary results.
Arch Neurol. 2005 May;62(5):753-7.
Abstract
2. Sparks DL, Petanceska S, Sabbagh M, et al. Cholesterol, copper and Ab in controls, MCI, AD and the AD Cholesterol-Lowering Treatment trial (ADCLT). Curr Alz Res 2005; in press.
3. Sparks DL, Lochhead J, Horstman D, Wagoner T, Martin T. Water quality has a pronounced effect on cholesterol-induced accumulation of Alzheimer amyloid beta (Abeta) in rabbit brain.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2002 Dec;4(6):523-9.
Abstract
4. Sparks DL, Schreurs BG. Trace amounts of copper in water induce beta-amyloid plaques and learning deficits in a rabbit model of Alzheimer's disease.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Sep 16;100(19):11065-9. Epub 2003 Aug 14. Erratum in: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Sep 30;100(20):11816.
Abstract
5. Sparks DL, Cholesterol, copper, and accumulation of thioflavine S-reactive Alzheimer's-like amyloid beta in rabbit brain.
J Mol Neurosci. 2004;24(1):97-104.
Abstract
6. Sparks DL, Hunsaker JC 3rd, Scheff SW, Kryscio RJ, Henson JL, Markesbery WR. Cortical senile plaques in coronary artery disease, aging and Alzheimer's disease.
Neurobiol Aging. 1990 Nov-Dec;11(6):601-7.
Abstract
7. Sparks DL, Scheff SW, Liu H, Landers T, Danner F, Coyne CM, Hunsaker JC 3rd. Increased density of senile plaques (SP), but not neurofibrillary tangles (NFT), in non-demented individuals with the apolipoprotein E4 allele: comparison to confirmed Alzheimer's disease patients.
J Neurol Sci. 1996 Jun;138(1-2):97-104.
Abstract
8. Sparks DL. Coronary artery disease, hypertension, ApoE, and cholesterol: a link to Alzheimer's disease?
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1997 Sep 26;826:128-46.
Abstract
9. Sparks DL, Sabbagh MN, Connor DJ, et al. Atorvastatin therapy lowers circulating cholesterol but not free radical activity in advance of identifiable clinical benefit in the treatment of mild-to-moderate AD. Curr AD Res 2005; in press.
View all comments by Larry Sparks
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Related News: Trial Troika—Immunotherapy Interrupted, Lipitor Lags, Dimebon Delivers
Comment by: Benjamin Wolozin, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
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Submitted 25 April 2008
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Posted 25 April 2008
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The results of the LEADe study provide clear evidence that atorvastatin does not delay the progression of Alzheimer disease. This result contrasts with a previous, preliminary study on atorvastatin by Sparks and colleagues, and it is disappointing [1]. However, the negative result is consistent with our recent epidemiological study, in which we compared the incidence of AD among subjects taking simvastatin, atorvastatin, and Lipitor, and observed a reduction in the incidence of AD only among subjects taking simvastatin [2].
Results are also expected imminently for the CLASP study, which investigated the effects of simvastatin on progression of AD using a prospective format similar to the LEADe study. The results of the CLASP study will be particularly informative. Simvastatin has shown the most consistent positive effect over a number of different study paradigms, but there could be a difference between results obtained when examining...
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The results of the LEADe study provide clear evidence that atorvastatin does not delay the progression of Alzheimer disease. This result contrasts with a previous, preliminary study on atorvastatin by Sparks and colleagues, and it is disappointing [1]. However, the negative result is consistent with our recent epidemiological study, in which we compared the incidence of AD among subjects taking simvastatin, atorvastatin, and Lipitor, and observed a reduction in the incidence of AD only among subjects taking simvastatin [2].
Results are also expected imminently for the CLASP study, which investigated the effects of simvastatin on progression of AD using a prospective format similar to the LEADe study. The results of the CLASP study will be particularly informative. Simvastatin has shown the most consistent positive effect over a number of different study paradigms, but there could be a difference between results obtained when examining the effects of simvastatin in patients with cardiovascular risk factors (such as occurs in an epidemiological study) compared to results obtained when studying the effects of simvastatin in a patient population that exhibited normal cholesterol levels at the outset of the study. So, stay tuned.
References: 1. Sparks DL, Sabbagh MN, Connor DJ, Lopez J, Launer LJ, Browne P, Wasser D, Johnson-Traver S, Lochhead J, Ziolwolski C. Atorvastatin for the treatment of mild to moderate Alzheimer disease: preliminary results. Arch Neurol. 2005 May;62(5):753-7. Abstract
2. Wolozin B, Wang SW, Li NC, Lee A, Lee TA, Kazis LE. Simvastatin is associated with a reduced incidence of dementia and Parkinson's disease. BMC Med. 2007;5:20. Abstract
View all comments by Benjamin Wolozin
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Related News: Trial Troika—Immunotherapy Interrupted, Lipitor Lags, Dimebon Delivers
Comment by: Roxana O. Carare, Roy O. Weller
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Submitted 16 May 2008
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Posted 19 May 2008
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Aβ Immunotherapy Trial Interrupted by Suspected Vasculitis in the Skin
Alzforum reported on 28 April 2008 that dosing in the Elan/Wyeth Phase 2 trial of active Aβ immunotherapy for Alzheimer disease was temporarily suspended following a suspected case of vasculitis in the skin. Dr Cynthia Lemere commented on the possible mechanism of the vasculitis and raised the problem of how Aβ is deposited in artery walls in the skin of elderly patients.
The presence of Aβ in artery walls could reflect failure of perivascular transport of soluble proteins along the walls of cutaneous arteries. Experimental studies (1) have shown that soluble proteins drain from the extracellular spaces of the brain along the basement membranes of capillaries and arteries and that this effectively represents the lymphatic drainage pathway for the brain. Aβ is deposited in these pathways in cerebral amyloid angiopathy in humans (2) and in mice (3).
Perivascular drainage of soluble Aβ from the brain is probably driven by the contrary waves that result from the...
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Aβ Immunotherapy Trial Interrupted by Suspected Vasculitis in the Skin
Alzforum reported on 28 April 2008 that dosing in the Elan/Wyeth Phase 2 trial of active Aβ immunotherapy for Alzheimer disease was temporarily suspended following a suspected case of vasculitis in the skin. Dr Cynthia Lemere commented on the possible mechanism of the vasculitis and raised the problem of how Aβ is deposited in artery walls in the skin of elderly patients.
The presence of Aβ in artery walls could reflect failure of perivascular transport of soluble proteins along the walls of cutaneous arteries. Experimental studies (1) have shown that soluble proteins drain from the extracellular spaces of the brain along the basement membranes of capillaries and arteries and that this effectively represents the lymphatic drainage pathway for the brain. Aβ is deposited in these pathways in cerebral amyloid angiopathy in humans (2) and in mice (3).
Perivascular drainage of soluble Aβ from the brain is probably driven by the contrary waves that result from the pulse waves traveling along arteries (4). As arteries stiffen with age, the amplitude of the pulse wave is reduced and the consequent reduction in motive force for perivascular drainage may contribute to the development of cerebral amyloid angiopathy in the elderly (4).
There is evidence that perivascular drainage of amyloidogenic peptides is not confined to the brain. Transthyretin amyloid is deposited in artery walls in peripheral nerves (5), and cystatin C amyloid angiopathy involves not only cerebral arteries but also arteries in other organs (6), reflecting a general phenomenon of “protein elimination failure arteriopathy (PEFA)” (2). The report nearly 20 years ago by Joachim, Mori, and Selkoe (7) of Aβ deposited in the walls of arteries in the skin and intestines supports the concept that Aβ drains along perivascular pathways in organs other than the brain.
Deposition of Aβ in arteries in the skin may be analogous to the failure of elimination of granular osmiophilic material (GOM) from the walls of arteries in the skin in CADASIL, a condition in which the cerebral arteries are the most severely affected (8). In transgenic mice with CADASIL, arteries in the brain and other organs including the tail are severely affected (9). These observations lead to the conclusion that the highly developed perivascular drainage in the brain also occurs in other organs of the body, albeit to a lesser extent.
Two possibilities emerge to account for vasculitis in the skin in the patient treated with Aβ immunotherapy: (a) drainage of Aβ from skin along perivascular pathways and its deposition as amyloid in artery walls followed by immune complex formation in the vessel walls themselves and inflammation, and (b) drainage of Aβ immune complexes from the skin interstitial fluid along perivascular drainage pathways and a vasculitic reaction in the artery walls.
One major question that remains is whether Aβ or immune complexes will enter artery walls in a similar way in organs other than the skin and induce vasculitis.
References: 1. Carare RO, Bernardes-Silva M, Newman TA, Page AM, Nicoll JAR, Perry VH, Weller RO. Solutes, but not cells, drain from the brain parenchyma along basement membranes of capillaries and arteries. Significance for cerebral amyloid angiopathy and neuroimmunology. Neuropathol Appl Neurobiol 2008;34:131-44. Abstract
2. Weller RO, Subash M, Preston SD, Mazanti I, Carare RO. Perivascular Drainage of Amyloid-beta Peptides from the Brain and Its Failure in Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy and Alzheimer's Disease. Brain Pathol 2008;18:253-66. Abstract
3. Herzig MC, Van Nostrand WE, Jucker M. Mechanism of cerebral beta-amyloid angiopathy: murine and cellular models. Brain Pathol 2006;16:40-54. Abstract
4. Schley D, Carare-Nnadi R, Please CP, Perry VH, Weller RO. Mechanisms to explain the reverse perivascular transport of solutes out of the brain. J Theor Biol 2006;238:962-74. Abstract
5. Reilly MM, Staunton H. Peripheral nerve amyloidosis. Brain Pathol 1996;6:163-77. Abstract
6. Palsdottir A, Snorradottir AO, Thorsteinsson L. Hereditary cystatin C amyloid angiopathy: genetic, clinical, and pathological aspects. Brain Pathol 2006;16:55-9. Abstract
7. Joachim CL, Mori H, Selkoe DJ. Amyloid beta-protein deposition in tissues other than brain in Alzheimer's disease. Nature 1989;341:226-30. Abstract
8. Ruchoux MM, Maurage CA. CADASIL: Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol 1997;56:947-64. Abstract
9. Ruchoux MM, Domenga V, Brulin P, Maciazek J, Limol S, Tournier-Lasserve E, Joutel A. Transgenic mice expressing mutant Notch3 develop vascular alterations characteristic of cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy. Am J Pathol 2003;162:329-42. Abstract
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View all comments by Roy O. Weller
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Related News: PIB-PET Biomarker Study Confirms Bapineuzumab Lowers Amyloid
Comment by: P. Murali Doraiswamy (Disclosure)
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Submitted 5 March 2010
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Posted 5 March 2010
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This is a very impressive study. It is the kind of pilot biomarker study that every top investigator dreams of doing, and kudos to the team that did it.
I noticed some 15 percent of AD patients were dropped from entering the trial because the scan showed they did not have sufficient amyloid in the brain. Without dropping these people, the study would likely have had no chance of showing a positive result and might have also exposed more people to risks. This shows the power of PET amyloid imaging to select people who have pathology in order to maximize your chance of a drug effect. Prior to this, we were treating AD patients blindly without knowing how much amyloid they had in their brains, a bit like treating people with a statin without knowing their cholesterol level.
With regard to the bapineuzumab therapy, the magnitude of amyloid clearance seems consistent and real, but at around 20 percent is modest. That is far less than was expected from prior autopsy studies of immunized patients or animal studies which suggested the vaccines might have a much bigger...
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This is a very impressive study. It is the kind of pilot biomarker study that every top investigator dreams of doing, and kudos to the team that did it.
I noticed some 15 percent of AD patients were dropped from entering the trial because the scan showed they did not have sufficient amyloid in the brain. Without dropping these people, the study would likely have had no chance of showing a positive result and might have also exposed more people to risks. This shows the power of PET amyloid imaging to select people who have pathology in order to maximize your chance of a drug effect. Prior to this, we were treating AD patients blindly without knowing how much amyloid they had in their brains, a bit like treating people with a statin without knowing their cholesterol level.
With regard to the bapineuzumab therapy, the magnitude of amyloid clearance seems consistent and real, but at around 20 percent is modest. That is far less than was expected from prior autopsy studies of immunized patients or animal studies which suggested the vaccines might have a much bigger effect. This is a new insight and we might need to lower our expectations. The potential promise with this technology is that we might be able to test how different doses of therapy affect amyloid clearance at an early stage, allowing companies to select the most optimal dose for definitive trials.
Going beyond amyloid, at the end of the day, one can clear all the amyloid in the brain and if the patient does not improve, it still is not a useful therapy. So what's missing is for the field to now show that clearing amyloid eventually leads to a meaningful cognitive and functional benefit for the individual.
Some minor methodologic issues: differences at baseline in cognition and amyloid burden (not unexpected in small studies) between treatment groups add a bit of uncertainty as to interpretation. The method for computing standardized uptake values relative to cerebellum (i.e., the amyloid ratios) varies slightly from one study to another, and one sees different ratios being called normal or abnormal. This makes it hard to compare findings across studies and across tracers. So I think we need head-to-head comparisons and also some standardization of the way one determines a positive from a negative scan.
At HAI and AAN in Toronto, and ICAD in Honolulu, we will see lots of new data on these tracers in terms of cognitive correlates in normals and MCI subjects. I also expect AVID's florbetapir (formerly known as AV-45) will be the first to present validation data from a multicenter autopsy study. Once the validation is complete, this will really jumpstart the use of PET amyloid imaging in secondary and primary prevention trials of both drugs and lifestyle interventions. It will also give us more insight into the role of amyloid in aging and dementia, and allow us to test mechanistic hypotheses.
View all comments by P. Murali Doraiswamy
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