Home
Scholarly Works
Desferrioxamine and Alzheimer's Disease
Journal article

Desferrioxamine and Alzheimer's Disease

Abstract

Drug trials designed to modify the progression of Alzheimer's disease (AD) have required the development of mental state and behavior evaluation instruments that are sensitive to cognitive decline and measure skills useful in everyday living. We describe a videotaped home behavior (VHB) assessment instrument with high construct validity and reliability and a strong relationship to criterion references. The VHB was employed to test the hypothesis that aluminum is an important pathogenic factor in AD. The trivalent chelating agent desferrioxamine (DFO), 125 mg i.m. twice daily five days per week, was used in a randomized single-blind, oral lecithin, placebo-controlled clinical trial in 48 patients with AD. Analysis showed that the treatment and no-treatment groups were closely matched at entry into the trial but that the rate of decline, as measured by the VHB over 2 years of observation, was twice as rapid in the no-treatment group compared with the DFO-treated group. Furthermore, trace-metal analysis of autopsied brain confirmed that extended treatment with DFO lowered neocortical brain aluminum concentrations to near control concentrations. Aluminum ion-specific chelation may be a useful palliative treatment for AD, and further clinical trials are indicated.

Authors

McLachlan DRC; Smith WL; Kruck TP

Journal

Therapeutic Drug Monitoring, Vol. 15, No. 6, pp. 602–607

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer

Publication Date

December 1, 1993

DOI

10.1097/00007691-199312000-00027

ISSN

0163-4356

Contact the Experts team