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Atorvastatin, Vaccine Trial Data Published
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

 
Comments on News and Primary Papers
  Comment by:  Tobias Hartmann
Submitted 16 May 2005  |  Permalink Posted 16 May 2005

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...  Read more


  Comment by:  Dominic Walsh, ARF Advisor
Submitted 16 May 2005  |  Permalink Posted 16 May 2005

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

  Comment by:  Benjamin Wolozin, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
Submitted 17 May 2005  |  Permalink Posted 17 May 2005

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)....  Read more


  Comment by:  Tobias Hartmann
Submitted 18 May 2005  |  Permalink Posted 19 May 2005

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


  Comment by:  Anne Fagan, ARF Advisor
Submitted 19 May 2005  |  Permalink Posted 23 May 2005

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...  Read more

  Comment by:  Sarah L. Cole, Robert Vassar, ARF Advisor
Submitted 25 May 2005  |  Permalink Posted 25 May 2005

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....  Read more


  Comment by:  Larry Sparks
Submitted 7 June 2005  |  Permalink Posted 7 June 2005

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...  Read more


  Primary Papers: Clinical effects of Abeta immunization (AN1792) in patients with AD in an interrupted trial.

Comment by:  Andre Delacourte
Submitted 15 November 2010  |  Permalink Posted 15 November 2010
  I recommend this paper
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