Volume 19, Issue 1 p. 9-18
Research Article

A randomized, placebo-controlled study of the efficacy and safety of sertraline in the treatment of the behavioral manifestations of Alzheimer's disease in outpatients treated with donepezil

Sanford I. Finkel

Corresponding Author

Sanford I. Finkel

Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago Medical School, and the Leonard Schanfield Research Institute at Council for Jewish Elderly, Chicago, IL, USA

Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago, 3127 Greenleaf Road, Wilmette, IL 60091, USA.Search for more papers by this author
Jacobo E. Mintzer

Jacobo E. Mintzer

Department of Psychiatry, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA

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Maurice Dysken

Maurice Dysken

Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center, Minneapolis VA Medical Center, Minneapolis, MN, USA

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K. R. R. Krishnan

K. R. R. Krishnan

Department of Psychiatry, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA

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Tal Burt

Tal Burt

Pfizer Inc., Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY, USA

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Thomas McRae

Thomas McRae

Pfizer Inc., Department of Medicine (Geriatrics), New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA

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First published: 05 January 2004
Citations: 109

Abstract

Objective

To examine the safety and efficacy of sertraline augmentation therapy in the treatment of behavioral manifestations of Alzheimer's disease (AD) in outpatients treated with donepezil.

Methods and materials

Patients with probable or possible AD, and a Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) total score >5 (with a severity score ≥2 in at least one domain), were treated with donepezil (5–10 mg) for 8 weeks, then randomly assigned to 12 weeks of double-blind augmentation therapy with either sertraline (50–200 mg) or placebo. Primary efficacy measures were the 12-item Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) and the Clinical Global Impression Improvement (CGI-I) and Severity (CGI-S) scales.

Results

24 patients were treated with donepezil+sertraline and 120 patients with donepezil+placebo. There were no statistically significant differences at endpoint on any of the three primary efficacy measures. However, a linear mixed model analysis found modest but statistically significantly greater improvements in the CGI-I score on donepezil+sertraline. Moreover, in a sub-group of patients with moderate-to-severe behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia, 60% of patients on sertraline vs 40% on placebo (p = 0.006) achieved a response (defined as ≥;50% reduction in a four-item NPI-behavioral subscale). One adverse event (diarrhea) was significantly (p < 0.05) more common in the donepezil+sertraline group compared to the donepezil+placebo group.

Conclusion

Sertraline augmentation was well-tolerated in this sample of AD outpatients. In addition, post hoc analyses demonstrated a modest but statistically significant advantage of sertraline over placebo augmentation in mixed model analyses and a clinically and statistically significant advantage in a subgroup of patients with moderate-to-severe behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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