Naproxen/Rofecoxib Trial Results Published
Quick Links
Both selective (COX-2 inhibitor, rofecoxib) and nonselective (COX-1/COX-2 inhibitor, naproxen) nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) fail to slow the cognitive decline associated with Alzheimer's disease (AD). This is the conclusion from a randomized controlled trial, which was reported in yesterday's Journal of the American Medical Association.
Paul Aisen of Georgetown University Medical Center, together with coworkers from the Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study, first brought this news to our attention at the 8th International Conference on Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders in Stockholm last year (see ARF related news story). Aisen and colleagues recruited over 400 volunteers with mild to moderate AD and randomly assigned 351 of them to receive placebo, naproxen, or rofecoxib. Participants in the three groups were evaluated at baseline and at three-month intervals for up to a full year using the Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive (ADAS-Cog) subscale, which measures cognitive and motor skills. Volunteers were also given a battery of secondary assessments, including Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI), Alzheimer Disease Cooperative Study-Activities of Daily Living (ADCS-ADL), and the Quality of Life-AD (QOL-AD) tests.
Aisen and colleagues found that test scores among the three groups were not statistically different, but the trend in the rofecoxib group was toward greater cognitive decline (mean change in ADAS-Cog scores were -5.7, -5.8, and -7.7 for placebo, naproxen, and rofecoxib groups, respectively). In contrast, ADCS-ADL scores indicated some benefit from use of rofecoxib, but the authors suggest that this may be related to an analgesic effect-patients feeling better and being more active-rather than a direct effect on AD.
The authors also suggest that the failure to effect any benefit may be related to the doses used. Naproxen was given at a low dose because of concerns about undesirable side effects, though rofecoxib was given at the full antiinflammatory dose. The authors also caution that "these results do not address the efficacy of NSAIDs in the prevention of AD." ADAPT, the Alzheimer's Disease Antiinflammatory Prevention Trial (see ARF related news story), which hopes to determine if naproxen and another COX-2 inhibitor, celecoxib, can prevent progression of AD, is currently underway.—Tom Fagan
References
News Citations
Further Reading
Primary Papers
- Aisen PS, Schafer KA, Grundman M, Pfeiffer E, Sano M, Davis KL, Farlow MR, Jin S, Thomas RG, Thal LJ, . Effects of rofecoxib or naproxen vs placebo on Alzheimer disease progression: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 2003 Jun 4;289(21):2819-26. PubMed.
Annotate
To make an annotation you must Login or Register.
Comments
NSAIDS, ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE AND PUBLIC CITIZEN
With regard to this news item please see my Open letter to Public
Citizen's Health Research Group on Alzheimer's disease research.
Science SAGE KE (21 Feb., 2003) [ Full
Text ] ; BMJ (27 Feb., 2003) [ Full
Text ] .
McGill University Faculty of Medicine
This is the fifth published trial of antiinflammatory treatments for disease modification or symptomatic improvement in Alzheimer's dementia. Two early small studies showed an encouraging suggestion of disease modification (slowing or progression) in patients randomized to indomethacin and diclofenac. These trials encountered severe difficulties, however, with high rates of dropouts, and they were too small, in any case, to produce definitive results.
More recently published trials have tested low-dose prednisone, a broad-spectrum corticosteroidal antiinflammatory agent, and hydroxychloroquine, an antimalarial drug that is widely acknowledged to have potent antiinflammatory activity. The prednisone trial showed a predictable range of safety concerns, but the treated group showed worse performance, if anything, on their measures of disease progression. The hydroxycholoroquine trial results were null, despite that trial's having especially abundant statistical power to demonstrate a relatively modest level of benefit. This latest trial with rofecoxib and naproxen is again null.
With the benefit of more recent laboratory data, there are reasons to wonder whether the alleged beneficial effects of NSAIDs on AD dementia could relate to activities of these compounds other than their inhibition of cyclooxygenases. In this connection, it is unfortunate that there has been no trial yet published of ibuprofen for AD treatment. In a broad range of observational studies, ibuprofen is the agent most widely associated with reduced risk of incident AD, and the laboratory data suggest that, among widely used NSAID agents, ibuprofen may have particular advantages in its influence on Aβ formation and possibly on glutamate uptake through its influence on PPARγ. Particularly in view of the findings produced by ibuprofen in Tg2597 transgenic mice, I believe that a treatment trial with ibuprofen is needed before we should sound the "death knell" for treatment trials with antiinflammatory agents.
More importantly, however, I would note that all of the above trials have tested various agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's dementia, whereas all of the observational data suggest that NSAIDs may reduce the risk of incident dementia, i.e., may protect those at risk from the progression of the AD pathogenetic pathway, from its latent stages (believed to occur over a period of decades) through the recognized AD prodrome of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and eventually to onset of AD dementia. While laboratory evidence might offer some hope that NSAIDs could mitigate disease pathogenesis after the onset of dementia, the epidemiological data offer no support for this perspective. Instead, they suggest that NSAIDs may be effective for the prevention (not treatment) of AD dementia. Therefore, the most promising avenue for future research with NSAIDs in AD would appear to lie with their being tested for prevention. Such prevention could either operate from the point when individuals have developed MCI (i.e., from the standpoint of AD dementia, secondary prevention) or in yet earlier pathogenetic stages that are still symptomatically silent (primary prevention). The Alzheimer's Disease Antiinflammatory Prevention Trial, or ADAPT, is testing two NSAIDs, naproxen and celecoxib, for their safety and efficacy in preventing AD dementia in asymptomatic individuals. Given the recent laboratory data, it may be that a similar trial using ibuprofen would be justified.
Goizueta Institute @ Emory Brain Health
The study by Aisen et al. shows no benefit to rofecoxib or naproxen in patients with mild to moderate AD. Nevertheless, this negative study is an important contribution to the collective effort to evaluate therapeutic strategies to treat or prevent AD. The excellent discussion highlights the salient points and limitations of this study:
Of note, although not published, both Merck and Pharmacia have conducted or are still conducting therapeutic trials with rofecoxib and celecoxib, respectively. Preliminary data presented at some meetings is consistent with a lack of efficacy of these agents.
From our perspective, we believe that it is important to consider testing ibuprofen in both therapeutic and prevention trials. Although there are no rigorous statistical data from the epidemiology studies that prove that ibuprofen use was associated with the reduction in risk, it is generally believed that the majority of long-term NSAID users will, in fact, be taking ibuprofen. Furthermore, ibuprofen is the only approved NSAID that has been tested in AD animal models and shown to be of benefit. The only current prevention trial of NSAIDs (ADAPT evaluating naproxen and celecoxib) is not administering a compound that alters Ab42 production. Moreover, neither of the agents in the ADAPT trial have been shown to have a beneficial effect in AD animal models.
Make a Comment
To make a comment you must login or register.