The Quality-of-Life Balance: Anticholinergics in the Hot Seat
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A case report in the December 5 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine presents an example of the potential dangers of anticholinergic drugs in some patients: short-term memory loss and hallucinations.
Anecdotally, many specialists are aware that drugs with anticholinergic properties can cause neuropsychological deficits. There is even evidence from a study by Elaine Perry and colleagues (Perry et al., 2003) that these drugs—including common drugs for incontinence, hypertension, psychosis, mood disorders, even allergies—might contribute to the pathology of Alzheimer's disease (see ARF related news story). Still, physicians have to help their patients balance quality-of-life issues, and for many people, these drugs are of great benefit.
Treating incontinence can clearly raise the quality of life for some elderly, but at what price? In their case report, Jack Tsao of the Naval Hospital in Jacksonville, Florida, and Kenneth Heilman of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Gainesville, Florida, describe a 73-year-old woman who experienced hallucinations and short-term memory loss when she first started taking the incontinence drug tolterodine. Her primary care physician suspected dementia and prescribed the cholinesterase inhibitor donepezil, which improved the memory problems. (The hallucinations also stopped, though the woman so enjoyed the conversations with deceased relatives that she initially hadn't reported them.) When the patient stopped taking tolterodine for several months, her memory improved further. When she began taking the drug again, there was another drop in short-term memory. With a second discontinuation, memory performance again rose, though not immediately.
"The half-life of tolterodine is less than 10 hours, but in this case, memory normalized long after its use was discontinued, suggesting that the medication altered gene regulation or protein expression," write the authors. Citing, among other things, the work of Perry and colleagues, the authors conclude with recommendations for judicious use of anticholinergics in older patients, along with memory testing of these patients.—Hakon Heimer
Comments
Washington University School of Medicine
The Case Report by Drs. Tsao and Heilman calls needed attention to a syndrome, often mimicking that of a dementing illness, of potentially reversible cognitive dysfunction associated with anticholinergic drugs used for the treatment of common bladder disturbances in older adults. Experience suggests that this syndrome is under-recognized, particularly by those physicians who are most likely to prescribe anticholinergic drugs for bladder dysfunction. Tsao and Heilman properly recommend judicious use of such medications in elderly patients who may be at risk for cognitive impairment. The problem is that, in some individuals, the drugs have real benefit for incontinence syndromes with corresponding improvement in quality of life.
Many questions need to be resolved before we will understand the appropriate role of these drugs in clinical practice. How prevalent is the syndrome of anticholinergic-associated cognitive dysfunction in older adults? Are some patients more susceptible than others, and if so, how might they be screened prior to initiation of treatment? Are certain anticholinergic drugs more likely than others to cross the blood-brain barrier and hence produce cognitive side effects? Formal study is needed to address these and related issues, given the growing numbers of elderly individuals who may be exposed to these agents, and Drs. Tsao and Heilman are to be commended for raising awareness about this underappreciated and understudied problem.