학술논문

Neuropsychiatric Symptoms in AD: Clinical Trials Targeting Mild Behavioral Impairment: A Report from the International CTAD Task Force
Document Type
Original Paper
Author
Soto, MariaRosenberg, P.Ballard, C.Vellas, B.Miller, D.Gauthier, S.Carrillo, M. C.Lyketsos, C.Ismail, Z.Abushakra, SusanAfshar, MohammadAgus, SamAiden, PaulAlam, JohnAlgeciras-Schimnich, AliciaAndrieu, SandrineBaruch, AmosBateman, RandallBatrla, RichardBaudler, MonikaBell, JoanneBittner, TobiasBozeat, SashaBraunstein, JoelBrooks, DawnBrooks, TriciaBullain, SzofiaBurmeister, JanCarrillo, MariaCho, MinCollins, EmilyCook, GavinDague, ChrisDe Santi, SusanDoody, RachelleDunn, BillyEgan, MichaelEriksson, SvenEsquivel, RianneFagan, TomFerrell, PhyllisFillit, HowardGallagher, MichelaGrönblad, Anna-KaijaHains, AvisHampel, HaraldHansson, OskarHefting, NancoHendrix, SuzanneHo, CaroleHu, HelenJones, DarylKinney, GeneKinnon, PaulKurzman, RickyLannfelt, LarsLawson, JohnLeBastard, NathalieLegrand, ValérieLewandowski, NicoleLim, CarineMasterman, DonnaMasters, ColinLu, MingMintun, MarkMolinuevo, José LuisMonteiro, CeciliaNavia, BradfordOdergren, TomasOsswald, GunillaPenny, LewisPontecorvo, MichaelPorsteinsson, AntonRabe, ChristineRaman, RemaRespondek, GesineReyderman, LarisaRogers, SharonRosenberg, PaulRosenzweig-Lipson, SharonRoskey, MarkCarrie, RubelSaad, ZiadSalloway, StephenSchindler, RachelSelkoe, DennisShulman, MelanieSims, JohnSink, KayceeSipe, LisaSkovronsky, DanielSomers, ElizabethStreffer, JohannesSuch, PedroSuhy, JoyceToloue, MasoudTouchon, JacquesVandijck, ManuWeiner, MichaelWhite, AnneWilson, DavidZago, WagnerZhou, Jin
Source
The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease. 11(1):56-64
Subject
Neuropsychiatric symptoms
agitation
dementia
Alzheimer’s disease
clinical trials
mild behavioral impairment
Language
English
ISSN
2426-0266
Abstract
The International CTAD Task Force (TF) addressed challenges related to designing clinical trials for agitation in dementia, presenting accomplishments from the two previous TFs on neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS). In addition, this TF proposed a paradigm shift in NPS assessment and management, presenting Mild Behavioral Impairment (MBI) as a clinical syndrome. MBI is marked by later-life emergent and persistent NPS in dementia-free older persons (ranging from cognitively unimpaired to subjective cognitive decline to mild cognitive impairment), which facilitates earlier detection and better prognostication of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). The TF has made the following recommendations for incorporation of NPS into AD preventative trials: (1) clinical trials targeting improvement in MBI symptoms should be undertaken; (2) treatment trials for MBI should be disease specific and confirm the diagnosis of participants using biomarkers; trials should include measures sensitive to cognitive changes in preclinical AD, which can serve as outcome measures, in addition to changes in biomarker levels; (3) as a first step, pharmacotherapeutic trials should address the full MBI complex as well as the specific symptoms/domains that constitute MBI; (4) clinical trials using problemadaptation psychotherapy to target affective MBI should be considered; and (5) MBI should be considered in AD trials of disease modifying therapies. The well-validated and widely-used MBI Checklist (MBI-C) is an appropriate symptom rating scale for these studies, as it was developed specifically to identify and measure MBI in dementia-free persons. Other scales such as the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) may be used, although administration at two timepoints may be necessary to operationalize the MBI criterion of symptom persistence.