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Heterogeneity of Treatment Response to Citalopram for Patients With Alzheimer's Disease With Aggression or Agitation: The CitAD Randomized Clinical Trial

Authors :
Paul B. Rosenberg
Jacob Mintzer
Constantine G. Lyketsos
Cynthia A. Munro
Constantine Frangakis
Lon S. Schneider
Bruce G. Pollock
Jeffery Newell
Peter V. Rabins
D P Devanand
David M. Shade
Christopher Marano
Gregory Pelton
Lea T. Drye
Anton P. Porsteinsson
Sonia Pawluczyk
Daniel Weintraub
Lisa Rein
Jerome A. Yesavage
Benoit H. Mulsant
Source :
The American journal of psychiatry. 173(5)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Pharmacological treatments for agitation and aggression in patients with Alzheimer's disease have shown limited efficacy. The authors assessed the heterogeneity of response to citalopram in the Citalopram for Agitation in Alzheimer Disease (CitAD) study to identify individuals who may be helped or harmed.In this double-blind parallel-group multicenter trial of 186 patients with Alzheimer's disease and clinically significant agitation, participants were randomly assigned to receive citalopram or placebo for 9 weeks, with the dosage titrated to 30 mg/day over the first 3 weeks. Five planned potential predictors of treatment outcome were assessed, along with six additional predictors. The authors then used a two-stage multivariate method to select the most likely predictors; grouped participants into 10 subgroups by their index scores; and estimated the citalopram treatment effect for each.Five covariates were likely predictors, and treatment effect was heterogeneous across the subgroups. Patients for whom citalopram was more effective were more likely to be outpatients, have the least cognitive impairment, have moderate agitation, and be within the middle age range (76-82 years). Patients for whom placebo was more effective were more likely to be in long-term care, have more severe cognitive impairment, have more severe agitation, and be treated with lorazepam.Considering several covariates together allowed the identification of responders. Those with moderate agitation and with lower levels of cognitive impairment were more likely to benefit from citalopram, and those with more severe agitation and greater cognitive impairment were at greater risk for adverse responses. Considering the dosages used and the association of citalopram with cardiac QT prolongation, use of this agent to treat agitation may be limited to a subgroup of people with dementia.

Details

ISSN :
15357228
Volume :
173
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American journal of psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aa8d355f59b7aac79c1722a98f012ac9