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Alzheimer’s Disease
         By Theodore Graphos
Patient Case
CaseOverview
Demographics


     • 83 y/o
     • Female
Situation


    Contacted by phone to follow-up on INR results
       A-fib
       Seen by Pharmacy Services for warfarin management
CaseHPI
 Recently diagnosed with Alzheimer’s Disease
 • Repeats herself
 • Tells the same stories repeatedly
 • Problems with medication adherence
   ▫ Repeat doses
   ▫ Missed doses
   ▫ Forgets schedule


 Her son is her primary caretaker
CasePMH
 Medical                       Surgical

 •   Alzheimer’s Disease       • BiV-PPM (Medtronic®) [Mar-11]
 •   A-fib, paroxsymal         • Cholecystectomy [Aug-10]
 •   Sick sinus syndrome       • Adenocarcinoma, colon –
 •   Heart failure               Polypectomy [Aug-10]
 •   Hypertension
                               • Cataracts, bilateral
 •   GERD
 •   Urinary incontinence
 •   Chronic anemia
 •   Depression
 •   Insomnia
 •   Fatigue
 •   Diverticulosis
 •   Meningioma [Jun-10]
 •   Adenocarcinoma [Aug-10]
CasePMH
 Medical                       Surgical

 •   Alzheimer’s Disease       • BiV-PPM (Medtronic®) [Mar-11]
 •   A-fib, paroxsymal         • Cholecystectomy [Aug-10]
 •   Sick sinus syndrome       • Adenocarcinoma, colon –
 •   Heart failure               Polypectomy [Aug-10]
 •   Hypertension
                               • Cataracts, bilateral
 •   GERD
 •   Urinary incontinence
 •   Chronic anemia
 •   Depression
 •   Insomnia
 •   Fatigue
 •   Diverticulosis
 •   Meningioma [Jun-10]
 •   Adenocarcinoma [Aug-10]
CasePMH
 Medical                       Surgical

 •   Alzheimer’s Disease       • BiV-PPM (Medtronic®)
                                 [Mar-11]
 •   A-fib, paroxsymal
 •   Sick sinus syndrome       • Cholecystectomy [Aug-10]
 •   Heart failure             • Adenocarcinoma, colon –
 •   Hypertension                Polypectomy [Aug-10]
 •   GERD                      • Cataracts, bilateral
 •   Urinary incontinence
 •   Chronic anemia
 •   Depression
 •   Insomnia
 •   Fatigue
 •   Diverticulosis
 •   Meningioma [Jun-10]
 •   Adenocarcinoma [Aug-10]
CasePMH
 Medical                       Surgical

 •   Alzheimer’s Disease       • BiV-PPM (Medtronic®) [Mar-11]
 •   A-fib, paroxsymal         • Cholecystectomy [Aug-10]
 •   Sick Sinus Syndrome       • Adenocarcinoma, colon –
 •   Heart failure               Polypectomy [Aug-10]
 •   Hypertension
                               • Cataracts, bilateral
 •   GERD
 •   Urinary incontinence
 •   Chronic anemia
 •   Depression
 •   Insomnia
 •   Fatigue
 •   Diverticulosis
 •   Meningioma [Jun-10]
 •   Adenocarcinoma [Aug-10]
CaseFHx/SHx/Allergies
Social Hx

 • Alcohol: Rarely
 • Smoking: Unknown
 • Caffeine: Occasional
Family Hx

 • Father: Deceased (59) – Kidney failure
 • Mother: Deceased (74) – Complications of diabetes
Allergies

     Substance             Reaction
     Furosemide            Rash, but can tolerate if given w/ diphenhydramine
     Hydrochlorothiazide   Skin rashes
     Nitrofurantoin        Pruritic rash on legs, trunk, and upper extremities
     Sulfa drugs
CaseVitals
                  7/26/11   • Patient is experiencing
 Ht                5’ 4”
                              unexplained weight-loss
                            • HR is controlled by PPM
 Wt               112 lbs

 BMI               19.2
 (18.5-25)

 BP               119/59
 (<120/80 mmHg)

 HR                 69
 (60-100 bpm)

 RR                 16
 (12-20 rpm)
CaseLabs                                         9/20/11
                               INR                 1.9 L
 • INR is subtherapeutic       (2-3)

 • Patient is anemic                              7/27/11
   ▫ Low RBC, Hgb, Hct         RBC                3.58 L
   ▫ Borderline macrocytic     (4.0-5.2 /L)

   ▫ Borderline anisocytosis   Hgb                10.9 L
                               (12.5-16.0 g/dL)
 • Renal impairment            Hct                33.1 L
                               (36-46 %)
   ▫ Low Scr, eGFR
                               MCV                  93
                               (81.0-97.4 fL)
                               RDW-CV              14.4
                               (11.7-14.4 %)
                               SCr                1.27 H
                               (0.6-1.2 mg/dL)
                               eGFR                39 L
                               (106-132 mL/min)
CaseLabs                                             7/27/11
                                  Albumin
 • No vitamin B12 or folate       (3.5-5.5 g/dL)
                                                         4.1
   deficiency                     K+                     4.1
                                  (3.5-5.1 mEq/L)
 • Digoxin levels are high, but   Ca2+                   9.3
   not toxic                      (9.0-10.5 mg/dL)
                                  Vitamin B12           756
                                  (211-946 pg/mL)
                                  Folate                > 20
                                  (> 3 ng/mL)

                                                      1/27/11
                                  Digoxin
                                  (0.5-2.2 ng/mL)        1.2
                                  (0.5-1 ng/mL)

                                                      7/22/09
                                  DEXA (T-score)     Spine: +1.4
                                  (> -1.0)           Femur: -1.1
Case Medications
              Medication              Strength   Qty      Form             Frequency                Indication
 Triamcinolone acetonide          0.1%            -      Cream     Once daily to rash       Rash
 Oxybutynin 24hr (Ditropan XL®)   15 mg           1       Tablet   Daily                    Urinary incontinence
 Potassium chloride               10 mEq / 7.5 mL         Liquid   Daily                    Potassium balance
 Pantoprazole (Protonix®)         40 mg           1       Tablet   Daily                    GERD
 Digoxin                          0.125 mg        1       Tablet   Daily                    CHF
 Bumetanide (Bumex®)              1 mg            1       Tablet   Daily                    CHF
 Warfarin (Coumadin®)             2.5 mg              2.5 mg daily, except 3.75 mg on Wed   A-fib
 Lisinopril                       5 mg            1       Tablet   Daily                    HTN, CHF
 Carvedilol                       6.25 mg         1       Tablet   Twice daily              CHF, HTN
 Centrum Silver Chewables®        -               1       Tablet   Daily                    None


  Patient tried Namenda® once some time in July, but “did not like the
   way it made her feel.”
  Patient also tried Aricept® once, but did not like it because it made her feel
   like a "zombie."
Alzheimer’s Disease
AD Description


 Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a common age-related,
 chronic debilitating neurodegenerative condition
 that is associated with progressive cognitive
 decline and profound neuronal loss.
AD Epidemiology


  • Most common form of dementia in the elderly
    ▫ 10% of those >65 y/o
    ▫ 50% of those >85 y/o
  • 4.5 million affected in the US
  • 18 million affected world-wide
AD History
                         • Discovered in 1907
                         • Two pathologic alterations
                           ▫ Neuritic plaques
                           ▫ Neurofibrillary tangles
                         • Full pathology is still
                           unknown

   Dr. Alois Alzheimer
AD Pathology
 Neuritic plaques
  • β-amyloid protein (Aβ)
     ▫ Breakdown product of a membrane-bound protein
  • Imbalance between the production and clearance of Aβ peptides resulting in
    aggregation that causes accumulation of Aβ and ultimately leading to AD (Amyloid
    Cascade Hypothesis)
  • While Aβ sequestered in plaques was at first believed to represent the critical toxic
    species, more recent versions of the hypothesis assume Aβ that is not sequestered in
    plaques actually drives the disease.

 Neurofibrillary Tangles (NFTs)
  • Tau protein
     ▫ Provide stability to microtubules
     ▫ Mostly found in neuronal cells
     ▫ Become hyperphosphorylated in AD
AD Pathology

     [ The Amyloid Cascade Hypothesis ]
NMDA
antagonists




              ChEI
AD Clinical Presentation
  Cognitive
   • Memory loss (poor recall and losing items)
   • Aphasia (circumlocution and anomia)
   • Apraxia
   • Agnosia
   • Disorientation (impaired perception of time and unable to recognize familiar people)
   • Impaired executive function

  Noncognitive
   • Depression, psychotic symptoms (hallucinations and delusions)
   • Behavioral disturbances (physical and verbal aggression, motor hyperactivity,
     uncooperativeness, wandering, repetitive mannerisms and activities, and combativeness)

  Functional
   • Inability to care for self (dressing, bathing, toileting, and eating)
AD Staging

 Stages of Alzheimer's Disease
 Mild                    Patient has difficulty remembering recent events. Ability to manage finances,
 (MMSE score 26–18)      prepare food, and carry out other household activities declines. May get lost
                         while driving. Begins to withdraw from difficult tasks and to give up hobbies.
                         May deny memory problems.
 Moderate                Patient requires assistance with activities of daily living. Frequently
 (MMSE score 17–10)      disoriented with regard to time (date, year, season). Recall for recent events
                         is severely impaired. May forget some details of past life and names of family
                         and friends. Functioning may fluctuate from day to day. Patient generally
                         denies problems. May become suspicious or tearful. Loses ability to drive
                         safely. Agitation, paranoia, and delusions are common.
 Severe                  Patient loses ability to speak, walk, and feed self. Incontinent of urine and
 (MMSE score 9–0)        feces. Requires care 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
AD Diagnosis
                                     Progressive change in
                                                                                               MMSE
                                      memory or function


Clinical diagnosis made mostly                                                                 DSM-IV criteria
by ruling out other possibilities         Dementia                                             AHRQ guidelines




• DSM-IV-TR                                                             Medication-induced
                                      Medication review                                        AHRQ guidelines
                                                                          dementia
• National Institutes of
  Health-Alzheimer’s Disease
                                                                        Hypothyroidism
  and Related Disorders               Abnormal lab tests
                                    Abnormal physical exam
                                                             Abnormal
                                                                        B12 Deficiency         AAN guidelines
                                                                        Systemic illness
  Association (NIH-ADRDA)
   ▫ Published in 2011                                                  Vascular dementia
                                                             Abnormal   Hydrocephalus
   ▫ Used mostly for research         CT or MRI/Optional
                                                                        Tumors
                                                                                               NINDS criteria

     purposes                                                           Subdural hematoma


                                                             Yes                               DSM-IV criteria
                                       Depressed mood                   Depression
                                                                                               AHRQ guidelines



                                                                                               NINCDS-ADRDA
                                      Alzheimer’s disease               Atypical disorders
                                                                                                 criteria




                                                                        Refer for assessment
AD Prognosis & Treatment Goals
Prognosis


    • Cannot cure or prevent Alzheimer’s
       ▫ Current therapy does not affect the progression of the disease
    • Survival following diagnosis is typically 4 to 6 years

Treatment Goals



   • Treat cognitive symptoms
   • Treat psychiatric and behavioral sequelae
   • Preserve cognitive functioning as long as possible
AD Non-pharmacologic therapy

 • Disease-state education    Table 63-3 Basic Principles of Care for the Alzheimer's Patient

                              •   Consider vision, hearing, or other sensory impairments.
 • End-of-life planning       •   Find optimal level of autonomy and adjust expectations for patient
                                  performance over time.
 • Handling behavioral
                              •   Avoid confrontation. Remain calm, firm, and supportive if the patient
   symptoms                       becomes upset.

                              •   Maintain a consistent, structured environment with stimulation level
 • Caring for the caregiver       appropriate to the individual patient.

                              •   Provide frequent reminders, explanations, and orientation cues.
                                  Employ guiding, demonstration, and reinforcement.

                              •   Reduce choices, keep requests and demands of the patient simple,
                                  and avoid complex tasks that lead to frustration.

                              •   Bring sudden declines in function and the emergence of new
                                  symptoms to professional attention.
AD Pharmacologic therapy
  Only 5 FDA-Approved Drugs

          Drug name                   Brand name          Approved For   FDA Approved

  Cholinesterase Inhibitors (ChEIs)

  Galantamine               Razadyne®              Mild to moderate         2001
  Rivastigmine              Exelon®                Mild to moderate        2000
  Donepezil                 Aricept®               All stages               1996
  Tacrine                   Cognex®                Mild to moderate         1993
  NMDA Antagonists

  Memantine                 Namenda®               Moderate to severe      2003
AD Cholinesterase Inhibitors

Actions

                                              Galantamine    Oral: 4 mg BID
                                              (Razadyne®)      (up to 12 mg BID)
                                                             Oral, ER: 8 mg daily
     ACh                                                       (up to 24 mg daily)



                      Choline + Acetic acid   Rivastigmine   Oral: 1.5 mg BID
                                              (Exelon®)        (up to 6 mg BID)
                                                             Patch: 4.6 mg/24 hr,
                                                               9.5 mg/24 hr


    • Increase concentration of Ach           Donepezil      Oral: 5, 10, or 23 mg
                                                               daily
    • Improve alertness and cognitive         (Aricept®)

      activity
AD Cholinesterase Inhibitors

Adverse Reactions

                                     Galantamine    Oral: 4 mg BID
   Related to cholinergic effects…   (Razadyne®)      (up to 12 mg BID)
                                                    Oral, ER: 8 mg daily
    •   N/V/D       Most common                       (up to 24 mg daily)

    •   Dizziness
                                     Rivastigmine   Oral: 1.5 mg BID
    •   Headache                     (Exelon®)        (up to 6 mg BID)

    •   Urinary incontinence                        Patch: 4.6 mg/24 hr,
                                                      9.5 mg/24 hr
    •   Fatigue
    •   Sweating                     Donepezil      Oral: 5, 10, or 23 mg
                                                      daily
                                     (Aricept®)
    •   Salivation
    •   Bradycardia
    •   Personality changes
AD Cholinesterase Inhibitors

Precautions

                                   Galantamine    Oral: 4 mg BID
                                                    (up to 12 mg BID)
    • Renal/hepatic impairment     (Razadyne®)
                                                  Oral, ER: 8 mg daily
                                                    (up to 24 mg daily)
    • Cardiac conduction
      abnormalities                Rivastigmine   Oral: 1.5 mg BID
                                                    (up to 6 mg BID)
    • Peptic ulcer disease         (Exelon®)
                                                  Patch: 4.6 mg/24 hr,
                                                    9.5 mg/24 hr
    • COPD/asthma
    • Seizures                     Donepezil      Oral: 5, 10, or 23 mg
                                                    daily
                                   (Aricept®)
    • Urinary tract obstructions
AD Cholinesterase Inhibitors

Interactions

                                 Galantamine    Oral: 4 mg BID
                                                  (up to 12 mg BID)
     Cholinergics                (Razadyne®)
                                                Oral, ER: 8 mg daily
     • Postoperative ileus                        (up to 24 mg daily)

     • Urinary retention
                                 Rivastigmine   Oral: 1.5 mg BID
                                 (Exelon®)        (up to 6 mg BID)
                                                Patch: 4.6 mg/24 hr,
     Anticholinergics                             9.5 mg/24 hr

     • Urinary incontinence
                                 Donepezil      Oral: 5, 10, or 23 mg
     • Parkinson’s               (Aricept®)       daily

     • COPD/asthma
     • 1st gen antihistamines
AD Cholinesterase Inhibitors

Monitoring

                                 Galantamine    Oral: 4 mg BID
                                 (Razadyne®)      (up to 12 mg BID)

    • Mental status                             Oral, ER: 8 mg daily
                                                  (up to 24 mg daily)

    • Cholinergic side-effects
                                 Rivastigmine   Oral: 1.5 mg BID
    • Renal & hepatic function   (Exelon®)        (up to 6 mg BID)
                                                Patch: 4.6 mg/24 hr,
                                                  9.5 mg/24 hr



                                 Donepezil      Oral: 5, 10, or 23 mg
                                 (Aricept®)       daily
AD NMDA antagonists

Actions



 • Blocks postsynaptic N-methyl-
   D-aspartate (NMDA) (i.e.        Memantine    Oral: 5 mg/day
                                                  (up to 20 mg/day)
                                   (Namenda®)
   glutamate) receptors                         Oral, ER: 7 mg daily
                                                  (up to 28 mg daily)
 • Prevents excitatory
   neurotoxicity
 • Improves signal transduction
AD NMDA antagonists

Adverse Reactions



   •   Constipation
   •   Confusion        Memantine
                        (Namenda®)
                                     Oral: 5 mg/day
                                       (up to 20 mg/day)

   •   Dizziness                     Oral, ER: 7 mg daily
                                       (up to 28 mg daily)

   •   Headache
   •   Hallucinations
   •   Coughing
   •   Hypertension
AD NMDA antagonists

Precautions



   • Cardiovascular disease
   • Renal impairment         Memantine
                              (Namenda®)
                                           Oral: 5 mg/day
                                             (up to 20 mg/day)

   • Seizures                              Oral, ER: 7 mg daily
                                             (up to 28 mg daily)
AD NMDA antagonists

Interactions



   • No significant drug
     interactions          Memantine    Oral: 5 mg/day
                                          (up to 20 mg/day)
                           (Namenda®)
                                        Oral, ER: 7 mg daily
                                          (up to 28 mg daily)
AD NMDA antagonists

Monitoring



  • Mental status
  • Blood pressure      Memantine
                        (Namenda®)
                                     Oral: 5 mg/day
                                       (up to 20 mg/day)

  • Renal function                   Oral, ER: 7 mg daily
                                       (up to 28 mg daily)
AD Unproven therapies
  • Estrogen
    ▫ Lower incidence of AD in women receiving HRT
  • NSAIDs
    ▫ Prevent damage from neuroinflammation
  • Statins
    ▫ Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) linked to AD
  • Vitamin E
    ▫ Antioxidant to counter oxidative stress


  * None of the therapies above have shown success in clinical trails *
AD Secondary therapies
  • Antipsychotics
    ▫ Used to treat behavioral symptoms
    ▫ Most of benefit for their neuroleptic effects
    ▫ Use non-pharmacologic approaches first
  • Benzodiazepines
    ▫ Also used to treat behavioral symptoms and agitation
    ▫ May worsen cognition
    ▫ Can increase fall risk
  • Antidepressants
    ▫ Depression is a common comorbidity in AD
    ▫ Citalopram and sertraline have the most evidence to support their use
  • Anticonvulsants
    ▫ Used for mood-stabilization
    ▫ Not enough evidence to recommend use
Back to our case…
CaseA & P
 1. Alzheimer’s Disease
    • No remaining pharmacologic options
    • Monitor cognitive capacity and recommend lifestyle
      modifications as necessary
    • Continually assess impact on adherence to other
      medications (especially warfarin)
    • Suggest resources for the son/caregiver
CaseA & P
 2. A-fib
   • CHADS2 = 3
      ▫ Lifetime anticoagulation with warfarin is therefore appropriate in this patient
   • Patient’s INR is still subtherapeutic
      ▫ Increased weekly dose by 7%

 3. Heart failure
   • Receiving recommended pharmacotherapy for Stage C heart failure
   • Well-controlled at this time

 4. Hypertension
   • BP is stable and at goal
   • Note that low diastolic BP could reduce cerebral perfusion and worsen AD
CaseA & P
 5. Urinary incontinence
   • Anticholinergic effects of Ditropan XL® may cause agitation and confusion which
     would amplify her AD
   • However, no negative effects were recorded after initiating this medication

 6. Chronic anemia
   • Check for s/sx of bleeding
   • Check serum iron, TBIC, t-sat, and ferritin w/ next lab draw

 7. Meningioma/Colon caner
   • Patient has refused additional intervention
   • Monitor for s/sx of bleeding
   • Occasionally reassess patient’s interest in treatment
References
1.   Anderson HS, Brannon GE, Boswell LP, Feng J, Haddock JL, Schneider R. Alzheimer Disease [Internet]. Medscape Reference: Drugs, Disease &
     Procedures. 2011 ;Available from: http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1134817-overview
2. Chopra K, Misra S, Kuhad A. Neurobiological aspects of Alzheimerʼs disease. [Internet]. Expert opinion on therapeutic targets. 2011 May
   ;15(5):535-55.[cited 2011 Oct 5] Available from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21314231
3. Cummings JL. Alzheimerʼs disease. [Internet]. The New England journal of medicine. 2004 Jul 1;351(1):56-67.[cited 2011 Aug 10] Available from:
   http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15229308
4. Cummings JL, Frank JC, Cherry D, Kohatsu ND, Kemp B, Hewett L, et al. Guidelines for managing Alzheimerʼs disease: Part II. Treatment.
   [Internet]. American family physician. 2002 Jun 15;65(12):2525-34.[cited 2011 Oct 5] Available from:
   http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12086242
5.   Geldmacher DS. Treatment guidelines for Alzheimerʼs disease: redefining perceptions in primary care. [Internet]. Primary care companion to the
     Journal of clinical psychiatry. 2007 Jan ;9(2):113-21.[cited 2011 Oct 5] Available from:
     http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1896294&tool=pmcentrez&rendertype=abstract
6. Jackson-siegal J. Our current understanding of the pathophysiology of alzheimer’s disease. Advanced Studies in Pharmacy. 2005 ;2(4):126-135.
7.   Marchesi VT. Alzheimerʼs dementia begins as a disease of small blood vessels, damaged by oxidative-induced inflammation and dysregulated
     amyloid metabolism: implications for early detection and therapy. [Internet]. The FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of
     American Societies for Experimental Biology. 2011 Jan ;25(1):5-13.[cited 2011 Jun 24] Available from:
     http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21205781
8. McNaull BBA, Todd S, McGuinness B, Passmore AP. Inflammation and anti-inflammatory strategies for Alzheimerʼs disease--a mini-review.
   [Internet]. Gerontology. 2010 Jan ;56(1):3-14.[cited 2011 Oct 5] Available from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19752507
9. Pereira C, Agostinho P, Moreira PI, Cardoso SM, Oliveira CR. Alzheimerʼs disease-associated neurotoxic mechanisms and neuroprotective
   strategies. [Internet]. Current drug targets. CNS and neurological disorders. 2005 Aug ;4(4):383-403.[cited 2011 Oct 5] Available from:
   http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16101556
10. Slattum P, Swerdlow R, Massey-Hill A. Alzheimerʼs Disease. In: DiPiro J, Talbert R, Yee G, Matzke G, Wells B, Posey LM, editor(s).
    Pharmacotherapy: A Pathophysiologic Approach, Seventh Edition. McGraw-Hill; 2008. p. 1051-1066.
11. Standridge JB. Vicious cycles within the neuropathophysiologic mechanisms of Alzheimerʼs disease. [Internet]. Current Alzheimer research. 2006
    Apr ;3(2):95-108.[cited 2011 Oct 5] Available from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16611010

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Alzheimer's Disease

  • 1. Alzheimer’s Disease By Theodore Graphos
  • 3. CaseOverview Demographics • 83 y/o • Female Situation Contacted by phone to follow-up on INR results  A-fib  Seen by Pharmacy Services for warfarin management
  • 4. CaseHPI Recently diagnosed with Alzheimer’s Disease • Repeats herself • Tells the same stories repeatedly • Problems with medication adherence ▫ Repeat doses ▫ Missed doses ▫ Forgets schedule Her son is her primary caretaker
  • 5. CasePMH Medical Surgical • Alzheimer’s Disease • BiV-PPM (Medtronic®) [Mar-11] • A-fib, paroxsymal • Cholecystectomy [Aug-10] • Sick sinus syndrome • Adenocarcinoma, colon – • Heart failure Polypectomy [Aug-10] • Hypertension • Cataracts, bilateral • GERD • Urinary incontinence • Chronic anemia • Depression • Insomnia • Fatigue • Diverticulosis • Meningioma [Jun-10] • Adenocarcinoma [Aug-10]
  • 6. CasePMH Medical Surgical • Alzheimer’s Disease • BiV-PPM (Medtronic®) [Mar-11] • A-fib, paroxsymal • Cholecystectomy [Aug-10] • Sick sinus syndrome • Adenocarcinoma, colon – • Heart failure Polypectomy [Aug-10] • Hypertension • Cataracts, bilateral • GERD • Urinary incontinence • Chronic anemia • Depression • Insomnia • Fatigue • Diverticulosis • Meningioma [Jun-10] • Adenocarcinoma [Aug-10]
  • 7. CasePMH Medical Surgical • Alzheimer’s Disease • BiV-PPM (Medtronic®) [Mar-11] • A-fib, paroxsymal • Sick sinus syndrome • Cholecystectomy [Aug-10] • Heart failure • Adenocarcinoma, colon – • Hypertension Polypectomy [Aug-10] • GERD • Cataracts, bilateral • Urinary incontinence • Chronic anemia • Depression • Insomnia • Fatigue • Diverticulosis • Meningioma [Jun-10] • Adenocarcinoma [Aug-10]
  • 8. CasePMH Medical Surgical • Alzheimer’s Disease • BiV-PPM (Medtronic®) [Mar-11] • A-fib, paroxsymal • Cholecystectomy [Aug-10] • Sick Sinus Syndrome • Adenocarcinoma, colon – • Heart failure Polypectomy [Aug-10] • Hypertension • Cataracts, bilateral • GERD • Urinary incontinence • Chronic anemia • Depression • Insomnia • Fatigue • Diverticulosis • Meningioma [Jun-10] • Adenocarcinoma [Aug-10]
  • 9. CaseFHx/SHx/Allergies Social Hx • Alcohol: Rarely • Smoking: Unknown • Caffeine: Occasional Family Hx • Father: Deceased (59) – Kidney failure • Mother: Deceased (74) – Complications of diabetes Allergies Substance Reaction Furosemide Rash, but can tolerate if given w/ diphenhydramine Hydrochlorothiazide Skin rashes Nitrofurantoin Pruritic rash on legs, trunk, and upper extremities Sulfa drugs
  • 10. CaseVitals 7/26/11 • Patient is experiencing Ht 5’ 4” unexplained weight-loss • HR is controlled by PPM Wt 112 lbs BMI 19.2 (18.5-25) BP 119/59 (<120/80 mmHg) HR 69 (60-100 bpm) RR 16 (12-20 rpm)
  • 11. CaseLabs 9/20/11 INR 1.9 L • INR is subtherapeutic (2-3) • Patient is anemic 7/27/11 ▫ Low RBC, Hgb, Hct RBC 3.58 L ▫ Borderline macrocytic (4.0-5.2 /L) ▫ Borderline anisocytosis Hgb 10.9 L (12.5-16.0 g/dL) • Renal impairment Hct 33.1 L (36-46 %) ▫ Low Scr, eGFR MCV 93 (81.0-97.4 fL) RDW-CV 14.4 (11.7-14.4 %) SCr 1.27 H (0.6-1.2 mg/dL) eGFR 39 L (106-132 mL/min)
  • 12. CaseLabs 7/27/11 Albumin • No vitamin B12 or folate (3.5-5.5 g/dL) 4.1 deficiency K+ 4.1 (3.5-5.1 mEq/L) • Digoxin levels are high, but Ca2+ 9.3 not toxic (9.0-10.5 mg/dL) Vitamin B12 756 (211-946 pg/mL) Folate > 20 (> 3 ng/mL) 1/27/11 Digoxin (0.5-2.2 ng/mL) 1.2 (0.5-1 ng/mL) 7/22/09 DEXA (T-score) Spine: +1.4 (> -1.0) Femur: -1.1
  • 13. Case Medications Medication Strength Qty Form Frequency Indication Triamcinolone acetonide 0.1% - Cream Once daily to rash Rash Oxybutynin 24hr (Ditropan XL®) 15 mg 1 Tablet Daily Urinary incontinence Potassium chloride 10 mEq / 7.5 mL Liquid Daily Potassium balance Pantoprazole (Protonix®) 40 mg 1 Tablet Daily GERD Digoxin 0.125 mg 1 Tablet Daily CHF Bumetanide (Bumex®) 1 mg 1 Tablet Daily CHF Warfarin (Coumadin®) 2.5 mg 2.5 mg daily, except 3.75 mg on Wed A-fib Lisinopril 5 mg 1 Tablet Daily HTN, CHF Carvedilol 6.25 mg 1 Tablet Twice daily CHF, HTN Centrum Silver Chewables® - 1 Tablet Daily None  Patient tried Namenda® once some time in July, but “did not like the way it made her feel.”  Patient also tried Aricept® once, but did not like it because it made her feel like a "zombie."
  • 15. AD Description Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a common age-related, chronic debilitating neurodegenerative condition that is associated with progressive cognitive decline and profound neuronal loss.
  • 16. AD Epidemiology • Most common form of dementia in the elderly ▫ 10% of those >65 y/o ▫ 50% of those >85 y/o • 4.5 million affected in the US • 18 million affected world-wide
  • 17. AD History • Discovered in 1907 • Two pathologic alterations ▫ Neuritic plaques ▫ Neurofibrillary tangles • Full pathology is still unknown Dr. Alois Alzheimer
  • 18. AD Pathology Neuritic plaques • β-amyloid protein (Aβ) ▫ Breakdown product of a membrane-bound protein • Imbalance between the production and clearance of Aβ peptides resulting in aggregation that causes accumulation of Aβ and ultimately leading to AD (Amyloid Cascade Hypothesis) • While Aβ sequestered in plaques was at first believed to represent the critical toxic species, more recent versions of the hypothesis assume Aβ that is not sequestered in plaques actually drives the disease. Neurofibrillary Tangles (NFTs) • Tau protein ▫ Provide stability to microtubules ▫ Mostly found in neuronal cells ▫ Become hyperphosphorylated in AD
  • 19. AD Pathology [ The Amyloid Cascade Hypothesis ]
  • 21. AD Clinical Presentation Cognitive • Memory loss (poor recall and losing items) • Aphasia (circumlocution and anomia) • Apraxia • Agnosia • Disorientation (impaired perception of time and unable to recognize familiar people) • Impaired executive function Noncognitive • Depression, psychotic symptoms (hallucinations and delusions) • Behavioral disturbances (physical and verbal aggression, motor hyperactivity, uncooperativeness, wandering, repetitive mannerisms and activities, and combativeness) Functional • Inability to care for self (dressing, bathing, toileting, and eating)
  • 22. AD Staging Stages of Alzheimer's Disease Mild Patient has difficulty remembering recent events. Ability to manage finances, (MMSE score 26–18) prepare food, and carry out other household activities declines. May get lost while driving. Begins to withdraw from difficult tasks and to give up hobbies. May deny memory problems. Moderate Patient requires assistance with activities of daily living. Frequently (MMSE score 17–10) disoriented with regard to time (date, year, season). Recall for recent events is severely impaired. May forget some details of past life and names of family and friends. Functioning may fluctuate from day to day. Patient generally denies problems. May become suspicious or tearful. Loses ability to drive safely. Agitation, paranoia, and delusions are common. Severe Patient loses ability to speak, walk, and feed self. Incontinent of urine and (MMSE score 9–0) feces. Requires care 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
  • 23. AD Diagnosis Progressive change in MMSE memory or function Clinical diagnosis made mostly DSM-IV criteria by ruling out other possibilities Dementia AHRQ guidelines • DSM-IV-TR Medication-induced Medication review AHRQ guidelines dementia • National Institutes of Health-Alzheimer’s Disease Hypothyroidism and Related Disorders Abnormal lab tests Abnormal physical exam Abnormal B12 Deficiency AAN guidelines Systemic illness Association (NIH-ADRDA) ▫ Published in 2011 Vascular dementia Abnormal Hydrocephalus ▫ Used mostly for research CT or MRI/Optional Tumors NINDS criteria purposes Subdural hematoma Yes DSM-IV criteria Depressed mood Depression AHRQ guidelines NINCDS-ADRDA Alzheimer’s disease Atypical disorders criteria Refer for assessment
  • 24. AD Prognosis & Treatment Goals Prognosis • Cannot cure or prevent Alzheimer’s ▫ Current therapy does not affect the progression of the disease • Survival following diagnosis is typically 4 to 6 years Treatment Goals • Treat cognitive symptoms • Treat psychiatric and behavioral sequelae • Preserve cognitive functioning as long as possible
  • 25. AD Non-pharmacologic therapy • Disease-state education Table 63-3 Basic Principles of Care for the Alzheimer's Patient • Consider vision, hearing, or other sensory impairments. • End-of-life planning • Find optimal level of autonomy and adjust expectations for patient performance over time. • Handling behavioral • Avoid confrontation. Remain calm, firm, and supportive if the patient symptoms becomes upset. • Maintain a consistent, structured environment with stimulation level • Caring for the caregiver appropriate to the individual patient. • Provide frequent reminders, explanations, and orientation cues. Employ guiding, demonstration, and reinforcement. • Reduce choices, keep requests and demands of the patient simple, and avoid complex tasks that lead to frustration. • Bring sudden declines in function and the emergence of new symptoms to professional attention.
  • 26. AD Pharmacologic therapy Only 5 FDA-Approved Drugs Drug name Brand name Approved For FDA Approved Cholinesterase Inhibitors (ChEIs) Galantamine Razadyne® Mild to moderate 2001 Rivastigmine Exelon® Mild to moderate 2000 Donepezil Aricept® All stages 1996 Tacrine Cognex® Mild to moderate 1993 NMDA Antagonists Memantine Namenda® Moderate to severe 2003
  • 27. AD Cholinesterase Inhibitors Actions Galantamine Oral: 4 mg BID (Razadyne®) (up to 12 mg BID) Oral, ER: 8 mg daily ACh (up to 24 mg daily) Choline + Acetic acid Rivastigmine Oral: 1.5 mg BID (Exelon®) (up to 6 mg BID) Patch: 4.6 mg/24 hr, 9.5 mg/24 hr • Increase concentration of Ach Donepezil Oral: 5, 10, or 23 mg daily • Improve alertness and cognitive (Aricept®) activity
  • 28. AD Cholinesterase Inhibitors Adverse Reactions Galantamine Oral: 4 mg BID Related to cholinergic effects… (Razadyne®) (up to 12 mg BID) Oral, ER: 8 mg daily • N/V/D Most common (up to 24 mg daily) • Dizziness Rivastigmine Oral: 1.5 mg BID • Headache (Exelon®) (up to 6 mg BID) • Urinary incontinence Patch: 4.6 mg/24 hr, 9.5 mg/24 hr • Fatigue • Sweating Donepezil Oral: 5, 10, or 23 mg daily (Aricept®) • Salivation • Bradycardia • Personality changes
  • 29. AD Cholinesterase Inhibitors Precautions Galantamine Oral: 4 mg BID (up to 12 mg BID) • Renal/hepatic impairment (Razadyne®) Oral, ER: 8 mg daily (up to 24 mg daily) • Cardiac conduction abnormalities Rivastigmine Oral: 1.5 mg BID (up to 6 mg BID) • Peptic ulcer disease (Exelon®) Patch: 4.6 mg/24 hr, 9.5 mg/24 hr • COPD/asthma • Seizures Donepezil Oral: 5, 10, or 23 mg daily (Aricept®) • Urinary tract obstructions
  • 30. AD Cholinesterase Inhibitors Interactions Galantamine Oral: 4 mg BID (up to 12 mg BID) Cholinergics (Razadyne®) Oral, ER: 8 mg daily • Postoperative ileus (up to 24 mg daily) • Urinary retention Rivastigmine Oral: 1.5 mg BID (Exelon®) (up to 6 mg BID) Patch: 4.6 mg/24 hr, Anticholinergics 9.5 mg/24 hr • Urinary incontinence Donepezil Oral: 5, 10, or 23 mg • Parkinson’s (Aricept®) daily • COPD/asthma • 1st gen antihistamines
  • 31. AD Cholinesterase Inhibitors Monitoring Galantamine Oral: 4 mg BID (Razadyne®) (up to 12 mg BID) • Mental status Oral, ER: 8 mg daily (up to 24 mg daily) • Cholinergic side-effects Rivastigmine Oral: 1.5 mg BID • Renal & hepatic function (Exelon®) (up to 6 mg BID) Patch: 4.6 mg/24 hr, 9.5 mg/24 hr Donepezil Oral: 5, 10, or 23 mg (Aricept®) daily
  • 32. AD NMDA antagonists Actions • Blocks postsynaptic N-methyl- D-aspartate (NMDA) (i.e. Memantine Oral: 5 mg/day (up to 20 mg/day) (Namenda®) glutamate) receptors Oral, ER: 7 mg daily (up to 28 mg daily) • Prevents excitatory neurotoxicity • Improves signal transduction
  • 33. AD NMDA antagonists Adverse Reactions • Constipation • Confusion Memantine (Namenda®) Oral: 5 mg/day (up to 20 mg/day) • Dizziness Oral, ER: 7 mg daily (up to 28 mg daily) • Headache • Hallucinations • Coughing • Hypertension
  • 34. AD NMDA antagonists Precautions • Cardiovascular disease • Renal impairment Memantine (Namenda®) Oral: 5 mg/day (up to 20 mg/day) • Seizures Oral, ER: 7 mg daily (up to 28 mg daily)
  • 35. AD NMDA antagonists Interactions • No significant drug interactions Memantine Oral: 5 mg/day (up to 20 mg/day) (Namenda®) Oral, ER: 7 mg daily (up to 28 mg daily)
  • 36. AD NMDA antagonists Monitoring • Mental status • Blood pressure Memantine (Namenda®) Oral: 5 mg/day (up to 20 mg/day) • Renal function Oral, ER: 7 mg daily (up to 28 mg daily)
  • 37. AD Unproven therapies • Estrogen ▫ Lower incidence of AD in women receiving HRT • NSAIDs ▫ Prevent damage from neuroinflammation • Statins ▫ Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) linked to AD • Vitamin E ▫ Antioxidant to counter oxidative stress * None of the therapies above have shown success in clinical trails *
  • 38. AD Secondary therapies • Antipsychotics ▫ Used to treat behavioral symptoms ▫ Most of benefit for their neuroleptic effects ▫ Use non-pharmacologic approaches first • Benzodiazepines ▫ Also used to treat behavioral symptoms and agitation ▫ May worsen cognition ▫ Can increase fall risk • Antidepressants ▫ Depression is a common comorbidity in AD ▫ Citalopram and sertraline have the most evidence to support their use • Anticonvulsants ▫ Used for mood-stabilization ▫ Not enough evidence to recommend use
  • 39. Back to our case…
  • 40. CaseA & P 1. Alzheimer’s Disease • No remaining pharmacologic options • Monitor cognitive capacity and recommend lifestyle modifications as necessary • Continually assess impact on adherence to other medications (especially warfarin) • Suggest resources for the son/caregiver
  • 41. CaseA & P 2. A-fib • CHADS2 = 3 ▫ Lifetime anticoagulation with warfarin is therefore appropriate in this patient • Patient’s INR is still subtherapeutic ▫ Increased weekly dose by 7% 3. Heart failure • Receiving recommended pharmacotherapy for Stage C heart failure • Well-controlled at this time 4. Hypertension • BP is stable and at goal • Note that low diastolic BP could reduce cerebral perfusion and worsen AD
  • 42. CaseA & P 5. Urinary incontinence • Anticholinergic effects of Ditropan XL® may cause agitation and confusion which would amplify her AD • However, no negative effects were recorded after initiating this medication 6. Chronic anemia • Check for s/sx of bleeding • Check serum iron, TBIC, t-sat, and ferritin w/ next lab draw 7. Meningioma/Colon caner • Patient has refused additional intervention • Monitor for s/sx of bleeding • Occasionally reassess patient’s interest in treatment
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