Title: Behavioral Decompensation in Alzheimer
1Behavioral Decompensation in Alzheimers
DiseaseA Systematic and Multimodal Approach to
Patient Management
2Case Study
- 81 y/o veteran longtime smoker w/ COPD, dx AD x 2
yrs, recently dx w/ inoperable lung CA sent
from NH for control of combative behavior and
hospice consultation pt lost 20 over past
month, anorexic, largely unresponsive. - Rx includes 1,500mg divalproex, risperidone 0.5mg
qAM, 1mg qHS, recent addition of haloperidol
0.5mg IM TID to allow for care administration
3Peak Frequency ofBehavioral Symptoms as AD
Progresses
100
80
Agitation
DiurnalRhythm
60
Irritability
Depression
Frequency ( of Patients)
Wandering
SocialWithdrawal
Aggression
40
MoodChange
SociallyUnacc.
Anxiety
Hallucinations
Paranoia
20
Delusions
SuicidalIdeation
Accusatory
Sexually Inappropriate
0
-40 -30 -20 -10 0
10 20 30
Months Before/After Diagnosis
Jost BC, Grossberg GT. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1996
441078-1081
4Keys To Evaluation Of BehavioralProblems In
Dementia
- Identify the problem behavior (WHAT)
- Timing / frequency of the behavior (WHEN)
- Surroundings / environment (WHERE)
- Others involved? (WITH WHOM)
- Very troubling / dangerous?
- Evaluation physical cognitive status
- Recommendations
Gray KF. Clin Geriatr Med. 2004(Feb)20(1)69-82
5The Delicate Balance of ClinicalDecision-making
RISKS
BENEFITS
6Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms in
Dementia BPSD
- General descriptive term for heterogeneous group
of non-cognitive symptoms behaviors occurring
in dementia - Symptom Clusters within BPSD include
- Depressive 20 - 40
- Psychotic 30 - 40
- Agitation/aggressive 50 - 80
B. A. Lawlor. J.Clin.Psychiatry 65 Suppl 115-10,
2004
7Criteria for Depression of Alzheimers Disease
- A. (Need 3 or more over 2 wks...)
- Depressed mood and/or
- Decreased positive affect or pleasure
- Appetite disruption
- Sleep disruption
- Psychomotor retardation / agitation
- Irritability
- Fatigue or loss of energy
- Worthlessness, hopelessness, guilt
- Thoughts of death or suicidal ideation
- B. All criteria met for dx of AD
- C. Sx cause clinically significant distress or
disruption in fxn
J. T. Olin, et al. Am.J.Geriatr.Psych
10(2)125-128, 2002 P. B. Rosenberg, et al.
Int.J.Geriatr.Psychiatry 20 (2)119-127, 2005
8TREAT Depression ofAlzheimers Disease!
- Rx Mood, anxiety
- Rx Sleep?
- Rx agitation?
9AAN Practice Parameters 2001Guideline-Reaffirmed
10/18/2003
- AAN practice parameters support the use of
first-line nonpharmacologic strategies for
agitation, especially when identifiable causes
such as pain or environmental triggers are
responsible
Doody RS, Stevens JC, Beck C, et al. Neurology.
2001(May 8)56(9)1154-1166
10Principles ofNonpharmacologic Management
- Safety
- Control risk physical, financial, driving
- Serenity
- Manage affects avoid overt frustration and anger
- Structure
- Increase organization maintain schedules,
facilitate good habits - Sanity
- Reduce caregiver strain seek social support, use
respite services
Gray KF. Clin Geriatr Med. 2004(Feb)20(1)69-82
11AAN Practice Parameters 2001Guideline-Reaffirmed
10/18/2003
- Educational programs should be offered to family
caregivers to improve caregiver satisfaction and
to delay the time to NH placement (Guideline) - Staff of long-term care facilities should also be
educated about AD to minimize the unnecessary use
of antipsychotic medications (Guideline) - Behavior modification, scheduled toileting, and
prompted voiding reduce urinary incontinence
(Standard) - Functional independence can be increased by
graded assistance, skills practice, and positive
reinforcement (Guideline)
R. S. Doody, et al. Neurology 56 (9)1154-1166,
2001
12Medication Considerations ForNon-urgent/Emergent
Agitation
Cholinesterase Inhibitors and Memantine
13NPI Scores Following Treatment with Different
ChEIs
Mean Change Per Item After 6 Months in Five
Studies
3 2 1 0 1 2 3
N 98
N 113
N 125
N 103
N 119
N 103
N 106
N 106
Mean change from baseline
Improvement
Placebo
Placebo
10 mg/d
Open-label 312 mg/d
10 mg/d
Open-label 312 mg/d
24 mg/day
Placebo
Rivastigmine
Galantamine
Aricept
Baseline
MMSE 14.4 MMSE 11.8 MMSE ?12
MMSE 9.2 MMSE 10.8 NPI-121
NPI-122 NPI-103 NPI-124 NPI-125
Nursing Community/ Community
Nursing Nursing home assisted
living home home
1Tariot et al., 2001 2Feldman et al., 2001
3Wilkinson et al., 2002 4Cummings et al., 2000
5Bullock et al., 2001 Cummings, et al., 2004
14Impact of Galantamine on Behavioral Symptoms
Efficacy measure Galantamine (N 1,327) Placebo (N 686) P
Individual NPI domain scores
Delusions -0.04 (2.43) 0.19 (2.23) 0.10
Hallucinations -0.02 (1.58) 0.07 (1.24) 0.068
Agitation/aggression 0.10 (2.64) 0.27 (2.30) 0.050
Depression/dysphoria 0.11 (2.40) 0.13 (2.26) 0.97
Anxiety -0.05 (2.66) 0.19 (2.48) 0.044
Elation/euphoria 0.01 (0.96) 0.00 (1.02) 0.86
Apathy/indifference -0.22 (3.25) -0.13 (3.21) 0.28
Disinhibition 0.00 (1.61) 0.09 (1.33) 0.020
Irritability/lability 0.12 (2.60) 0.20 (2.36) 0.71
Aberrant motor behavior -0.15 (2.96) 0.12 (2.91) 0.050
a Effect size difference in mean change scores
(galantamine minus placebo) divided by the pooled
within-group SD (Cohenss ?). p lt.05 for
between-group comparisons (Val Elteren test, df
1). lt.05 for within-group comparisons
(Wilcoxon signed-rank tests).
N. Herrmann, et al. Am.J.Geriatr.Psychiatry 13
(6)527-534, 2005
15Effects of Donepezil on Neuropsychiatric Symptoms
in Patients with Dementia and Severe Behavioral
Disorders
- The total score of the NPI was significantly
reduced over the 20 weeks of therapy with
donepezil - 62 pts had at least a 30 reduction in total NPI
score - significantly greater than the number
with no meaningful response - More patients had total or partial resolution of
depression and delusions than those who had no
meaningful change - Clinically meaningful treatment effect sizes were
notable for the delusion factor (0.340) and the
mood factor (0.39). - Significant correlations between the Clinical
Global Impression-Improvement and reductions in
mood and agitation scores - The results suggest that donepezil reduces
behavioral symptoms, particularly mood
disturbances and delusions, in pts with AD with
relatively severe psychopathology
J. L. Cummings, et al. Am.J Geriatr.Psychiatry 14
(7)605-612, 2006
16Memantine in Moderate to SevereAD Study Impact
on Behavior - NPI
- At End Point
- There was no statistically significant difference
between the 2 groups for total NPI scores - There was a statistically significant difference
between the treatment groupsin favor of
memantine in the following domains - Delusions P .0386
- Agitation/aggression P .0083
LOCF analysis Reisberg B, et al. N Engl J
Med. 20033481333-1341
17Memantine Donepezil in Moderate toSevere AD
Study Impact on Behavior
Memantine Donepezil Treatment Associated With
Superior Outcomes in Key AD Domains
P.002
P.001
Worsening
Mean Change From Baseline
Improvement
NPI
BGP-Care
LOCF analysis. Bars indicate 95 confidence
intervals Tariot P, et al. JAMA.
2004291317-324
18Behavioral effects of memantine in AD pts
receiving donepezil treatment
- Pts treated with memantine had significantly
lower NPI total scores than pts treated with
placebo - Significant effects for memantine on
agitation/aggression, eating/appetite, and
irritability/lability - Pts w/ agitation/aggression at baseline Rx w/
memantine showed significant reduction of
symptoms compared with placebo-treated pts - Memantine-treated pts without agitation/aggression
at baseline evidenced significantly less
emergence of this symptom compared with similar
pts receiving placebo - Caregivers of pts receiving memantine registered
significantly less agitation-related distress
J. L. Cummings, et al. Neurology 67 (1)57-63,
2006
19AAN Practice Parameters 2001(Reaffirmed 10-18-03)
- Treat agitation, psychosis and depression
- The patient's paranoia, suspiciousness,
combativeness or resistance to maintaining
personal hygiene can seem overwhelming to
families and caregivers and significantly impact
quality of life. Evidence indicates that several
strategies can decrease problem behaviors. If
environmental manipulation fails to eliminate
agitation or psychosis, use antipsychotics
R. S. Doody, et al. Neurology 56 (9)1154-1166,
2001 Full guidelines available at www.aan.com
20Diagnostic Criteria forPsychosis of AD
- Diagnosis of Alzheimers dementia
- Exclusion of schizophrenia or other causes of
psychotic symptoms - Hallucinations and/or delusions
- Late-onset
- Present intermittently for ?1 month
- Disruptive to patient functioning
- Associated agitation, negative symptoms, and
depression - Disturbances do not correlate exclusively with
delirium
D. V. Jeste and S. I. Finkel. Am.J.Geriatr.Psychia
try 8 (1)29-34, 2000 L. S. Schneider, et al.
Am.J.Geriatr.Psychiatry 11 (4)414-425, 2003
21ANTIPSYCHOTIC USE FOR AGITATION
- Persistent DANGER to self or others?
- Behaviors impair function?
C. Ballard and J. Cream. Int.Psychogeriatr. 17
(1)4-12, 2005
22The Delicate Balance of ClinicalDecision-making
RISKS
BENEFITS
23Antipsychotic Documentation
- Severity of symptoms
- Danger to patient and others
- Lack of response to alternative approaches
- Awareness of risks of treatment
- Judgment that potential benefits outweigh risks
- Previous benefit?
- Previous tolerability?
- Discussion with family
- Monitoring plan
- Plan for dose reduction when stable
(Thanks to Ira Katz, MD)
24Atypical Antipsychotic Treatment for Psychosis
Dangerous Behavioral Dyscontrol in Dementia
- Olanzapine 2.5 10 mg, oral loading pts in
urgent settings 15-20 mg 1st 24 hr IM - Risperidone 0.5 2 mg, caution w/ doses gt 1 mg
- Quetiapine 25-150 mg, especially w/ parkinsonism,
Lewy Body Dementia - Aripiprazole 5-10 mg, non-urgent use
- Ziprasidone 20-60 mg BID, emerging option IM
J. S. Street et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry.
200057(10)968-976 and R. W. Baker et al. J
Clin Psychopharmacol. 200323(4)342-348 I. R.
Katz et al. J Clin Psychiatry. 199960(2)107-115
and P. P. de Deyn et al. Clin Neurol Neurosurg.
2005 P. N. Tariot and M. S. Ismail. J Clin
Psychiatry. 200263 suppl 1321-26 De Deyn et
al. AAGP 16th Annual Meeting, 2003 A.
Berkowitz. J Psychiatric Practice. 20039(6)
469-473
25Efficacy and Adverse Effects of Atypical
Antipsychotics for DementiaMeta-analysis of
Randomized, Placebo-controlled Trials
- Efficacy on rating scales was observed by
meta-analysis for aripiprazole and risperidone,
but not for olanzapine - There were smaller effects for less severe
dementia, outpatients, and patients selected for
psychosis - Approx 1/3 dropped out w/o overall differences
between Rx placebo - Adverse events mainly somnolence UTI or
incontinence across Rx, and EPS or abnormal gait
with risperidone or olanzapine
L. S. Schneider, et al. Am.J Geriatr.Psychiatry
14 (3)191-210, 2006
26Efficacy and Adverse Effects of Atypical
Antipsychotics for Dementia (cont)
Meta-analysis of Randomized, Placebo-controlled
Trials
- Cognitive test scores worsened with drugs
- There was no evidence for increased injury,
falls, or syncope - Significant risk for cerebrovascular events,
especially with risperidone - Increased risk for death overall was reported
elsewhere - The modest efficacy and uncertain response rates
combined with the risks detailed here suggest
that antipsychotics should be used with more
deliberate consideration
L. S. Schneider, et al. Am.J Geriatr.Psychiatry
14 (3)191-210, 2006
27Risk of Death In Elderly Users of Conventional
vs. Atypical Antipsychotic Medications
- If confirmed, these results suggest that
conventional antipsychotic medications are at
least as likely as atypical agents to increase
the risk of death among elderly persons and that
conventional drugs should not be used to replace
atypical agents discontinued in response to the
FDA warning.
P. S. Wang, et al. N Engl J Med 353
(22)2335-2341, 2005
28Antipsychotic EquivalenciesBased On D2 Receptor
Occupancy Expert Consensus Guidelines
- Quetiapine 300-400 mg
- Chlorpromazine 100 mg
- Ziprasidone 80 mg
- Aripiprazole 10 mg
- Loxapine 15 mg
- Olanzapine 10 mg
- Risperidone 2.5 mg
- Haloperidol 2 mg
Kane et al. J Clin Psychiatry. 200364 (suppl
12)5-19 Kapur et al. Am J Psychiatry. 2001158(3
)360-369 Schotte et al. Psychopharmacology
(Berl).1996124 (1-2)57-73
29Non-neuroleptic OptionsFor Agitation ??
LIMITED PROOF OF EFFICACY
K. M. Sink, et al. JAMA 293 (5)596-608, 2005 K.
N. Franco and B. Messinger-Rapport. J Am.Med
Dir.Assoc. 7 (3)201-202, 2006
30Alternative Rx FOR AGITATION
- SSRI REDUCE IRRITABILITY non-psychotic pts,
psychosis? - TRAZODONE (25-50 mg BID-TID) during day, qHS
- DIVALPROEX, CARBAMAZEPINE, GABAPENTIN
- ADJUNCTIVE BENZODIAZEPINES
- HORMONES for SEXUAL AGGRESSION
(medroxyprogesterone acetate 150 mg IM q4wks) - Propranolol (100 mg/d)
Gray KF. Clin Geriatr Med. 2004(Feb)20(1)69-82
W. K. Summers. J Alzheimers.Dis. 9 (1)69-75,
2006 E. R. Peskind, et al. Alzheimer
Dis.Assoc.Disord. 19 (1)23-28, 2005
31Behavioral Decompensation in AD
Last Words for Caregivers
- Medications do not work alone
- Fewer expectations late in day
- Distract with tasks or food
- Remind and assist dont take over!
- Be willing to compromise
- Back off and let patient relax redirect as
appropriate - They cant resist if you dont insist
Gray KF. Clin Geriatr Med. 2004(Feb)20(1)69-82