4.3 Article

Use of Antipsychotic Drugs in Patients with Alzheimer's Disease Treated with Rivastigmine versus Donepezil A Retrospective, Parallel-Cohort, Hypothesis-Generating Study

Journal

DRUGS & AGING
Volume 27, Issue 11, Pages 903-913

Publisher

ADIS INT LTD
DOI: 10.2165/11584290-000000000-00000

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation East Hanover New Jersey USA
  2. Novartis

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Background and Objective Rivastigmine and donepezil are two cholinesterase inhibitors (ChEIs) indicated for the treatment of mild-to-moderate Alzheimer s disease Dementia-related behavioural issues are typically managed by environmental modification and the use of psychotropics including antipsychotic medications However, ChEIs have also been associated with reductions in behavioural symptoms in Alzheimer's disease patients This retrospective, parallel-cohort, hypothesis-generating study investigated whether treatment with rivastigmine is associated with reduced prescription of antipsychotic medications compared with treatment with donepezil Methods A combined analysis of two claims databases was conducted Patients were Included if they had a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease and were newly initiated on either rivastigmine or donepezil Patients with prior use of memantine and/or antipsychotics were excluded Kaplan-Meier and Cox analyses were conducted to compare the rate of antipsychotic drug use between the rivastigmine and donepezil groups Results A total of 956 patients receiving rivastigmine and 12 778 patients receiving donepezil formed the study population Analysis revealed that 64 (6 7%) rivastigmine and 989 (7 7%) donepezil recipients received antipsychotic medications (log-rank test from Kaplan-Meier analysis, p = 0 2289) The Cox regression analysis showed that rivastigmine was associated with a statistically significant reduction in the prescription of antipsychotic drugs relative to donepezil (hazard ratio 0 73, p = 0 044) Older age, longer time between Alzheimer's disease diagnosis and first ChEI dispensing, lower dose of ChEI at treatment initiation and the presence of baseline depression and neuropsychiatric symptoms were associated with a significantly increased likelihood of antipsychotic drug use Conclusions In this retrospective analysis, Alzheimer's disease patients with no prior use of antipsychotics initiated on rivastigmine had a significantly lower rate of prescription of antipsychotic drugs than those treated with donepezil

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