Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Levetiracetam for Alzheimer's Disease Neuropsychiatric Symptoms Related to Epilepsy Trial (LAPSE) - A Phase II Exploratory Study
Patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) are increasingly recognized to have seizures in
addition to cognitive decline. Seizures may contribute to memory problems as well as other
symptoms common in AD like agitation, depression, or apathy. These symptoms are collectively
called neuro-psychiatric symptoms. Studies of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients
with AD have suggested that injury to certain parts of the brain can cause these
neuro-psychiatric symptoms. Based on this evidence, the investigators hypothesize that
seizures can also cause neuro-psychiatric symptoms in patients with AD and may be related to
the injury seen on MRI.
The current study will follow participants for 1 year and will involve participants with AD
who also have neuro-psychiatric symptoms. Participants will be examined with three brain wave
studies to assess for seizure-like activity. Participants with seizure-like activity will all
receive levetiracetam for 1 year. All participants will have their neuro-psychiatric
symptoms, cognitive abilities, quality of life, and AD severity assessed throughout the year.
The investigators plan to determine if levetiracetam changes the severity of the
participants' neuro-psychiatric symptoms compared to their baseline as well as compared to
participants without seizure-like activity. 65 participants will need to be recruited to test
the study hypotheses. The study will take place at Walter Reed National Military Medical
Center.
Alzheimer's Disease (AD) has long been known to carry an increased risk of seizure, with
early estimates suggesting patients with AD have a 10-22% risk at least one unprovoked
seizure and an 8- to 10-fold higher seizure rate over the general population. Retrospective
data has suggested that the onset of both clinical seizure and abnormal discharge on
electroencephalogram (EEG) may cluster around or even precede the onset of cognitive decline.
With extended EEG and/or 1-hour magnetoencephalogram (MEG), up to 42% of patients with AD
have evidence of subclinical seizure or epileptiform discharges, two-thirds of which were
identified only during sleep. Recent evidence has also found a much higher incidence of
dyscognitive seizure (47%) and other nonconvulsive semiologies (55%) than previously
reported, including jamais vu, déjà vu, sensory phenomenon, speech arrest/aphasia, and
amnestic spells.
A particularly problematic aspect of dementia in general and AD in particular is
neuropsychiatric symptoms. Neuropsychiatric symptoms increase with duration and severity of
dementia, observed in as much as 60-90% of these patients. To some extent, neuropsychiatric
symptoms may also be associated with focal dysfunction, particularly of the non-dominant
fronto-temporal lobes. Seizure or transient epileptiform discharges, then, might explain some
of the neuropsychiatric manifestations associated with AD, especially since the most common
areas of discharge are the fronto-temporal lobes in AD. Neuropsychiatric symptoms and their
causes are of particular concern in the management of patients with AD given the strain on
patients and families and their high association with nursing home placement.
This study will complete up to 3 serial EEGs on each participant, and all participants with
epileptiform activity identified on EEG will be started on levetiracetam. All participants
will be followed with serial neuro-psychiatric symptom, cognitive, severity, and
quality-of-life metrics in order to analyze the effect of levetiracetam on these measures
over 1 year.
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