Pharmacological management of Alzheimer's disease
(From NICE NG97, June 2018)
The three acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibitors donepezil, galantamine and rivastigmine as monotherapies are recommended as options for managing mild to moderate Alzheimer's.
Memantine monotherapy is recommended as an option for managing Alzheimer's disease for people with:
- moderate Alzheimer's disease who are intolerant of or have a contraindication to AChE inhibitors or
- severe Alzheimer's disease.
For people with an established diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease who are already taking an AChE inhibitor:
- consider memantine in addition to an AChE inhibitor if they have moderate disease
- offer memantine in addition to an AChE inhibitor if they have severe disease. Ongoing use in severe disease is off-label, however stopping would be as per guidance below.
Treatment should be under the following conditions:
- For people who are not taking an AChE inhibitor or memantine, prescribers should only start treatment with these on the advice of a clinician who has the necessary knowledge and skills. This could include:
- secondary care medical specialists: psychiatrists, geriatricians and neurologists
- other healthcare professionals (GPs, nurse consultants and advanced nurse practitioners), if they have specialist expertise in diagnosing and treating Alzheimer's disease.
- Once a decision has been made to start an AChE inhibitor or memantine, the first prescription may be made in primary care.
- For people with an established diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease who are already taking an AChE inhibitor, primary care prescribers may start treatment with memantine without taking advice from a specialist clinician.
- Do not stop AChE inhibitors in people with Alzheimer's disease because of disease severity alone (other issues will determine discontinuation, such as worthwhile maintenance of cognitive, global, functional or behavioural symptoms, concurrent physical illness with contraindications, side-effects or clearly at palliative stage of care).
- Do not offer statins, aspirin, hypertension medication or diabetes medication to treat vascular dementia. There is a lack of evidence for this. Use these treatments in line with their usual respective guidelines.
Additional notes
- If starting medication for dementia, review other medications to ensure there are no drugs worsening cognition e.g. anticholinergics.
- Pharmacological therapy is based on modest clinical impact from studies mostly over 3-6m on symptom progression and possible increasing time to institutionalisation. With minor adverse symptoms fairly common, starting low and going slow is important.
- NG97 also covers the pharmacological management of non-Alzheimer’s dementia and in particular the use of AChE inhibitors and memantine in Lewy Body Dementia and mixed dementia.
- Cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine can be used to treat behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia in some cases, meaning that they should not be discontinued for these individuals even if there is evidence of ongoing cognitive decline.