Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01438060
Other study ID # CN138-006
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 3
First received September 2, 2011
Last updated November 7, 2013
Start date August 2000
Est. completion date July 2010

Study information

Verified date November 2013
Source Otsuka Pharmaceutical Development & Commercialization, Inc.
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority Belgium: Ministry of Social Affairs, Public Health and the EnvironmentFrance: Afssaps - Agence française de sécurité sanitaire des produits de santé (Saint-Denis)
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The primary objective of the study is to compare the efficacy of aripiprazole with placebo in patients with psychosis associated with Alzheimer's dementia.


Description:

Open label Extension Phase: The 130-week Extension Phase was conducted to provide information regarding long-term safety and efficacy of aripiprazole in participants who were diagnosed at the onset of the Acute Phase with psychotic symptoms associated with dementia of the Alzheimer's type who responded to treatment in the 10-week Acute Phase of this study.

Treatment beyond 140 week: A country-specific amendment for France, allowed participants treated with aripiprazole who, according to the investigator's opinion, showed improvement at the Week 140 visit to continue treatment beyond 140 weeks. The termination was to be determined by clinical benefit to he participant.

Study design:

Acute Phase: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, flexible-dose, parallel-group study.

Extension Phase: Open label; flexible-dose.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 232
Est. completion date July 2010
Est. primary completion date July 2010
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 55 Years to 95 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Non-institutionalized patients with a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease as defined by Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders - Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) criteria with symptoms of delusions or hallucinations, which have been present, at least intermittently for one month or longer

- Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) score of 6 to 24 points

- Patients capable of self locomotion or locomotion with the aid of an assistive device

- Patients with an identified caregiver or proxy

For Extension Phase:

Eligible patients were males and females who had completed the 10-week Acute Phase in either treatment group; had a Week 10 Total Score of = 6 on the NPI; and were, in the judgment of the investigator, deemed suitable for participation in the long-term trial.

Treatment beyond 140 weeks:

All subjects who completed the extension phase of CN138-006 in any French Investigational Site may be considered eligible for entry until they are no longer receiving clinical benefit, per the investigator's judgment

Exclusion Criteria:

- Patients with an Axis I (DSM IV) diagnosis of:

- delirium

- amnestic disorders

- bipolar disorder

- schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder

- mood disorder with psychotic features

- Patients with reversible causes of dementia

- Patients with psychotic symptoms continuously present since prior to the onset of the symptoms of dementia

- Patients with psychotic symptoms that are better accounted for by another general medical condition or by direct physiological effects of a substance

- Patients with a current major depressive episode with psychotic symptoms of hallucinations or delusions

- Patients with a diagnosis of dementia related to infection with the human immunodeficiency virus

- Patients with substance-induced persistent dementia

- Patients with dementia due to vascular causes, multi-infarct, head trauma, Pick's disease, Parkinson's disease, frontal or temporal dementia, Lewy body dementia, or any specific non-Alzheimer's type dementia

- Patients with seizure disorders

- Patients who have been refractory to neuroleptics used to treat psychotic symptoms in the past when treated for an adequate period with a therapeutic dose, unless permission is obtained from Bristol-Myers Squibb

- Patients who have met DSM-IV criteria for any significant substance use disorder within the 6 months prior to the start of screening

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Aripiprazole (BMS-337039)
Acute Phase: Oral, Tablets (1 and 5 mg), Week 1-2: 2 mg, Week 3-4: 2 - 5 mg, Week 5-6: 2 - 10 mg, Weeks 7-10: 2 - 15 mg, Once daily, 10 weeks Extension Phase: Oral, Tablets (1 and 5 mg), Week 11: 2 mg, Weeks 12-13: 2 - 5 mg, Weeks 14-15: 2 - 10 mg, Weeks 16-140: 2 - 15 mg, Once daily, 130 weeks
Placebo
Acute Phase: Oral, Tablets, 0 mg, Once daily, 10 Weeks

Locations

Country Name City State
n/a

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Otsuka Pharmaceutical Development & Commercialization, Inc. Otsuka America Pharmaceutical

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Change From Baseline in Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) Psychosis Subscale Score at Week 10 in Acute Phase The NPI is a questionnaire that quantifies behavioral changes in dementia. For each of 12 behavioral domains there are 4 scores: Frequency (scale:1=occasionally to 4=very frequently), Severity (scale:1=Mild to 3=Severe), Total (frequency x severity), Caregiver distress (scale: 0=not at all distressing to 5=extremely distressing).The NPI Psychosis Subscale consists of the two domains of Delusions and Hallucinations, calculated by adding the Individual Item Scores, to yield a possible total score of 0 to 24. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Week 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Psychosis Subscale Score Through Week 8 in Acute Phase The NPI is a questionnaire that quantifies behavioral changes in dementia. For each of 12 behavioral domains there are 4 scores: Frequency (scale:1=occasionally to 4=very frequently), Severity (scale:1=Mild to 3=Severe), Total (frequency x severity), Caregiver distress (scale: 0=not at all distressing to 5=extremely distressing).The NPI Psychosis Subscale consists of the two domains of Delusions and Hallucinations, calculated by adding the Individual Item Scores, to yield a possible total score of 0 to 24. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, and 8 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Total Score in Acute Phase The NPI is a questionnaire that quantifies behavioral changes in dementia. For each of 12 behavioral domains there are 4 scores: Frequency (scale: 1=occasionally to 4=very frequently), Severity (scale:1=Mild to 3=Severe), Total (frequency x severity), Caregiver distress (scale: 0=not at all distressing to 5=extremely distressing).The NPI Total Score is calculated by adding the Individual Item Scores for all 12 domains, to yield a possible NPI Total Score of 0 to 144. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Participants Who Demonstrated a = 50% Decrease From Baseline to Endpoint in the NPI Psychosis Subscale Score in Acute Phase The NPI is a questionnaire that quantifies behavioral changes in dementia. For each of 12 behavioral domains there are 4 scores: Frequency (scale:1=occasionally to 4=very frequently), Severity (scale:1=Mild to 3=Severe), Total (frequency x severity), Caregiver distress (scale: 0=not at all distressing to 5=extremely distressing).The NPI Psychosis Subscale consists of the two domains of Delusions and Hallucinations, calculated by adding the Individual Item Scores, to yield a possible total score of 0 to 24. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Participants Who Demonstrated a = 50% Decrease From Baseline in the Total NPI Score in Acute Phase The NPI is a questionnaire that quantifies behavioral changes in dementia. For each of 12 behavioral domains there are 4 scores: Frequency (scale: 1=occasionally to 4=very frequently), Severity (scale:1=Mild to 3=Severe), Total (frequency x severity), Caregiver distress (scale: 0=not at all distressing to 5=extremely distressing).The NPI Total Score is calculated by adding the Individual Item Scores for all 12 domains, to yield a possible NPI Total Score of 0 to 144. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Psychosis Subscale Caregiver Distress Score in Acute Phase The NPI is a questionnaire that quantifies behavioral changes in dementia. For each of 12 behavioral domains there are 4 scores: Frequency (scale:1=occasionally to 4=very frequently), Severity (scale:1=Mild to 3=Severe), Total (frequency x severity), Caregiver distress (scale:0=not at all distressing to 5=extremely distressing). The NPI Psychosis Subscale Caregiver Distress Score is calculated by adding Individual Item Scores for the domains of Delusions and Hallucinations, to yield a possible total score of 0 to 10. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline=improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Total Caregiver Distress Score in Acute Phase The NPI is a questionnaire that quantifies behavioral changes in dementia. For each of 12 behavioral domains there are 4 scores: Frequency (scale: 1=occasionally to 4=very frequently), Severity (scale:1=Mild to 3=Severe), Total (frequency x severity), Caregiver distress (scale: 0=not at all distressing to 5=extremely distressing).The total NPI Caregiver Distress Score is calculated by adding the 12 Caregiver Distress Individual Item Scores, to yield a possible total score of 0 to 60. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in Clinical Global Impression (CGI) Severity of Illness Score in Acute Phase The CGI rating scale, which measures symptom severity, treatment response and the efficacy of treatments, is used in clinical studies on mental disorders. CGI Severity scale is a 7-point scale that requires the clinician to rate the severity of the illness at the time of assessment, relative to the clinician's past experience with participants who have the same diagnosis. The assessment is based on severity of mental illness at the time of rating, 0=not assessed, 1=normal, 2=borderline mentally ill; 3=mildly ill; 4=moderately ill; 5=markedly ill; 6=severely ill; or 7=extremely ill. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary CGI Improvement Score in Acute Phase The CGI rating scale, which measures symptom severity, treatment response and the efficacy of treatments, is used in clinical studies on mental disorders. CGI Improvement scale is a 7 point scale that requires the clinician to assess how much the participant's illness has improved or worsened relative to a baseline state at the beginning of the intervention: 1=very much improved; 2=much improved; 3=minimally improved; 4=no change; 5=minimally worse; 6=much worse; 7=very much worse. Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) Total Score in Acute Phase The BPRS is designed to measure clinical change in participants and is used as a global measure of psychopathology. The BPRS includes 18 items with items devoted to hallucinatory behavior, suspiciousness, unusual thought content, etc. BPRS is an 18-item clinician rated scale with 11 general symptom items, 5 positive-symptom items, and 2 negative symptom items scored on a 7-point scale (1=not present and 7=extremely severe), with higher score indicating greater severity of symptom. Total possible score range=18 to 126.
A negative change score signifies improvement.
Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) Total Score in Acute Phase The MMSE is a screening test for cognitive dysfunction. The test consists of five sections (orientation, registration, attention-calculation, recall, and language). It is a 19 item scale, the total score can range from 0 to 30, with a higher score indicating better function. A positive change score indicates improvement from baseline. Baseline (Day 0), Week 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Delusions The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Hallucinations The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Agitation/Aggression The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Depression/Dysphoria The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Anxiety The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Apathy/Indifference The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Elation/Euphoria The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Disinhibition The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Irritability/Lability The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Aberrant Motor Behavior The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Appetite/Eating Behaviors The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in NPI Individual Item Scores in Acute Phase: Sleep The 12 individual items in NPI that quantify behavioral changes in dementia are delusions, hallucinations, agitation, depression, anxiety, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, euphoria, aberrant motor behavior, nighttime behaviors, and appetite. For each behavioral domain there are 4 scores (refer to outcome 1 for the scoring for frequency, severity, total, caregiver distress). Presence of symptoms (0=no, 1=yes) x ratings for frequency and severity yield a total possible score of 0 to 12 for each item. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 No
Secondary Change From Baseline in Simpson-Angus Scale (SAS) Total Score in Acute Phase The SAS is a 10-item instrument used to evaluate the presence and severity of parkinsonian symptomatology. It is the most commonly used rating scale for Parkinsonism in clinical trials over the past 25 years. The ten items focus on rigidity rather than bradykinesia, and do not assess subjective rigidity or slowness. Items are rated for severity on a 0-4 scale, with definitions given for each anchor point. The total SAS Score has a possible range from 10 to 50.(lower score=less severe). Negative change scores indicate improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 2, 4, and 10 Yes
Secondary Change From Baseline in Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) Total Score in Acute Phase The Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) is a rating scale that was designed to measure involuntary movements (tardive dyskinesia). The AIMS test has a total of twelve items rating involuntary movements of various areas of the patient's body. These items are rated on a five-point scale of severity from 0-4. The scale is rated from 0 (none), 1 (minimal), 2 (mild), 3 (moderate), 4 (severe).
AIMS Total Score is from 0 to 28. A negative change score signifies improvement.
Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 2, 4, 8, and 10 Yes
Secondary Change From Baseline in Barnes Global Clinical Assessment of Akathisia in Acute Phase The Barnes Akathisia Rating Scale is a 4-item scale to assess presence and severity of drug-induced akathisia, including both objective items and subjective items, together with a global clinical assessment of akathisia. Global assessment is made on a scale of 0 to 5 with comprehensive definitions provided for each anchor point on scale: 0=absent; 1=questionable; 2=mild akathisia; 3=moderate akathisia; 4=marked akathisia; 5=severe akathisia. Score has a possible range from 0 (absent) to 5 (severe akathisia). Negative change scores indicate improvement in akathisia. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 Yes
Secondary Participants With Extrapyramidal Symptoms (EPS) Related Adverse Events in Acute Phase Extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS) are various movement disorders such as acute dystonic reactions, pseudoparkinsonism, or akathisia Week 1 to week 10 Yes
Secondary Participants Who Died, Experienced Serious Adverse Events (SAEs), Adverse Events (AEs) or Discontinuations Due to AEs in Acute Phase AE is defined as any new untoward medical occurrence or worsening of a pre-existing medical condition. SAE is any untoward medical occurrence that at any dose results in death, is life-threatening, requires inpatient hospitalization or causes prolongation of existing hospitalization, results in persistent or significant disability/incapacity, is a cancer, is a congenital anomaly/birth defect, results in the development of drug dependency or drug abuse, is an important medical event. Week 1 to week 10 Yes
Secondary Participants With Potentially Clinically Significant Laboratory Abnormalities in Acute Phase Criteria for identifying potentially clinically significant laboratory values were based on guidelines suggested by the FDA Division of Neuropharmacological Drug Products. Normal ranges are local lab data and vary according to the site. M=male, F=female. Criteria for hematocrit also includes a 3 point shift from baseline. Week 1 to Week 10 Yes
Secondary Participants With Potentially Clinically Significant (PCS) Vital Sign Abnormalities in Acute Phase Systolic BP: increase defined as =180 and a =20-mmHg increase from baseline (BL); decrease defined as =90 and a =20mmHg decrease from BL. Diastolic BP: increase defined as =105 and a =15mmHg decrease from BL, decrease defined as =50 and a =15mmHg decrease from BL. Heart rate: increase defined as =120 and =15bpm increase from BL, decrease defined as =50 and =15bpm decrease from BL; Weight: increase defined as =7% from BL, decrease defined as =7% decrease BL. Criteria for identifying PCS measurements are based on guidelines suggested by the FDA Division of Neuropharmacological Drug Products Week 1 to week 10 Yes
Secondary Participants With Potentially Clinically Significant Electrocardiogram Abnormalities in Acute Phase Bradycardia:Heart rate =50 bpm and =15 bpm decrease from baseline; Supraventricular premature beat: =2 per 10 seconds and any increase from baseline; 1st degree A-V Block: PR =0.20 seconds and increase of =0.05 second from baseline; Intraventricular conduction block:QRS =0.12 second and increase of =0.02 second from baseline; QTcB= =450 msec and =10% increase from baseline; QTcN ==450 msec and =10% increase from baseline. All other events were not present at baseline but observed during the study. Inc=increase Week 1 to Week 10 Yes
Secondary Change in Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) Psychosis Subscale Score From Baseline During Extension Phase The NPI is a questionnaire that quantifies behavioral changes in dementia. For each of 12 behavioral domains there are 4 scores: Frequency (scale:1=occasionally to 4=very frequently), Severity (scale:1=Mild to 3=Severe), Total (frequency x severity), Caregiver distress (scale: 0=not at all distressing to 5=extremely distressing).The NPI Psychosis Subscale consists of the two domains of Delusions and Hallucinations, calculated by adding the Individual Item Scores, to yield a possible total score of 0 to 24. Lower score=less severity. A negative change score from baseline indicates improvement. Baseline (Day 0), Weeks 18,26,40,52,68,84,100,116,132,140 No
Secondary Clinical Global Impression (CGI) Improvement Score During Extension Phase The CGI rating scale, which measures symptom severity, treatment response and the efficacy of treatments, is used in clinical studies on mental disorders. CGI Improvement scale is a 7 point scale that requires the clinician to assess how much the participant's illness has improved or worsened relative to a baseline state at the beginning of the intervention: 1=very much improved; 2=much improved; 3=minimally improved; 4=no change; 5=minimally worse; 6=much worse; 7=very much worse. Weeks 12, 14, 18, 22, 26, 30, 34, 40, 46, 52, 68, 84, 100, 116, 132, 140 No
Secondary Change in Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) Total Score During Extension Phase AIMS is a rating scale that was designed to measure involuntary movements (tardive dyskinesia). The AIMS test has a total of twelve items rating involuntary movements of various areas of the patient's body. These items are rated on a five-point scale of severity from 0-4. The scale is rated from 0 (none), 1 (minimal), 2 (mild), 3 (moderate), 4 (severe).
AIMS Total Score is from 0 to 28. A negative change score signifies improvement.
End of Acute Phase (Week 10), Weeks 14, 18, 22, 26, 30, 34, 40, 46, 52, 68, 84, 100, 116, 140 Yes
Secondary Change in Simpson-Angus Scale (SAS) Total Score During Extension Phase The SAS is a 10-item instrument used to evaluate the presence and severity of parkinsonian symptomatology. It is the most commonly used rating scale for Parkinsonism in clinical trials over the past 25 years. The ten items focus on rigidity rather than bradykinesia, and do not assess subjective rigidity or slowness. Items are rated for severity on a 0-4 scale, with definitions given for each anchor point. The total SAS Score has a possible range from 10 to 50 (lower score=less severe). Negative change scores indicate improvement. End of Acute Phase (Week 10), Weeks 18,26, 40, 52 Yes
Secondary Change in Barnes Global Clinical Assessment of Akathisia Score During Extension Phase The Barnes Akathisia Rating Scale is a 4-item scale to assess presence and severity of drug-induced akathisia, including both objective items and subjective items, together with a global clinical assessment of akathisia. Global assessment is made on a scale of 0 to 5 with comprehensive definitions provided for each anchor point on scale: 0=absent; 1=questionable; 2=mild akathisia; 3=moderate akathisia; 4=marked akathisia; 5=severe akathisia. Score has a possible range from 0 (absent) to 5 (severe akathisia). Negative change scores indicate improvement in akathisia. End of Acute Phase (Week 10), Weeks 18,26, 40, 52 Yes
Secondary Participants With Extrapyramidal Symptoms (EPS) Related Adverse Events During Extension Phase Extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS) are various movement disorders such as acute dystonic reactions, pseudoparkinsonism, or akathisia Week 11 to Week 140 Yes
Secondary Participants Who Died, Experienced Serious Adverse Events (SAEs), Adverse Events (AEs) or Discontinuations Due to AE During Extension Phase AE is defined as any new untoward medical occurrence or worsening of a pre-existing medical condition. SAE is any untoward medical occurrence that at any dose results in death, is life-threatening, requires inpatient hospitalization or causes prolongation of existing hospitalization, results in persistent or significant disability/incapacity, is a cancer, is a congenital anomaly/birth defect, results in the development of drug dependency or drug abuse, is an important medical event. Week 11 to Week 140 Yes
Secondary Participants With a Potentially Clinically Significant Vital Sign Abnormality During Extension Phase Systolic BP: increase defined as =180 and a =20-mmHg increase from baseline (BL); decrease defined as =90 and a =20mmHg decrease from BL. Diastolic BP: increase defined as =105 and a =15mmHg decrease from BL, decrease defined as =50 and a =15mmHg decrease from BL. Heart rate: increase defined as =120 and =15bpm increase from bBL, decrease defined as =50 and =15bpm decrease from BL; Weight: increase defined as =7% from baseline, decrease defined as =7% decrease BL. Criteria for identifying PCS measurements based on guidelines suggested by the FDA Division of Neuropharmacological Drug Products Week 11 to Week 140 Yes
Secondary Participants With a Potentially Clinically Significant Electrocardiogram Abnormalities During Extension Phase Bradycardia:Heart rate =50 bpm and =15 bpm decrease from baseline; Supraventricular premature beat: =2 per 10 seconds and any increase from baseline; 1st degree A-V Block: PR =0.20 seconds and increase of =0.05 second from baseline; Intraventricular conduction block:QRS =0.12 second and increase of =0.02 second from baseline; QTcB= =450 msec and =10% increase from baseline; QTcN ==450 msec and =10% increase from baseline. All other events were not present at baseline but observed during the study Week 11 to Week 140 Yes
Secondary Participants With Potentially Clinically Significant Laboratory Abnormalities During Extension Phase Criteria for identifying potentially clinically significant laboratory values were based on guidelines suggested by the FDA Division of Neuropharmacological Drug Products. Week 11 to Week 140 Yes
Secondary Participants Who Died, Experienced Serious Adverse Events (SAEs), Adverse Events (AEs) or Discontinuations Due to AE During Treatment Beyond 140 Weeks AE is defined as any new untoward medical occurrence or worsening of a pre-existing medical condition. SAE is any untoward medical occurrence that at any dose results in death, is life-threatening, requires inpatient hospitalization or causes prolongation of existing hospitalization, results in persistent or significant disability/incapacity, is a cancer, is a congenital anomaly/birth defect, results in the development of drug dependency or drug abuse, is an important medical event. Week 140 to Week 328 Yes
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Not yet recruiting NCT00154635 - Efficacy and Safety Study of DCB-AD1 in Patients With Mild to Moderate Alzheimer’s Disease Phase 2
Completed NCT00208819 - A Comparison of Two Standard Therapies in the Management of Dementia With Agitation Phase 4
Completed NCT00997425 - Home Evaluation of Exit Barriers in Wandering N/A
Terminated NCT02322021 - Dose-Finding Study To Evaluate Safety, Tolerability, and Efficacy of E2609 in Participants With Mild Cognitive Impairment Due to Alzheimer's Disease (Prodromal Alzheimer's Disease) and Mild to Moderate Dementia Due to Alzheimer's Disease Phase 2
Completed NCT03119259 - Technology Intervention to Support Caregiving for Alzheimer's Disease (I-CARE) N/A
Completed NCT00099242 - Efficacy and Safety of the Rivastigmine Transdermal Patch in Patients With Probable Alzheimer's Disease Phase 3
Completed NCT03721705 - Renew NCP-5 for the Treatment of Mild Cognitive Impairment Due to Alzheimer's Disease (AD) or Mild Dementia of the Alzheimer's Type Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT05113732 - Association of Cognition With Functional Mobility in People With Alzheimer's Disease
Active, not recruiting NCT03661034 - Study of Tolerability, Safety and Efficacy of Sensory Stimulation at Multiple Dose Levels to Improve Brain Function (Etude Study) N/A
Completed NCT03160027 - Photobiomodulation for Improving Brain Function in Dementia (PBM Dementia) N/A
Completed NCT03475316 - Movement Intervention for Memory Enhancement N/A
Completed NCT02727699 - A Phase II Study to Assess the Safety, Tolerability and Efficacy of Xanamem™ in Subjects With Mild Dementia Due to AD (XanADu) Phase 2
Completed NCT00259454 - Project COPE:Managing Dementia at Home Phase 3
Completed NCT00505167 - Memantine Versus Donepezil in Early Stages of Alzheimer's Disease Phase 4
Completed NCT03246269 - Normative Values for the German Version of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)
Recruiting NCT03890861 - Reducing African Americans' Alzheimer's Disease Risk Through Exercise (RAATE)" N/A
Completed NCT03991195 - Intervention of Intestinal Microorganism in Mild Cognitive Impairment N/A
Completed NCT00515333 - TRx0014 in Patients With Mild or Moderate Alzheimer's Disease Phase 2
Completed NCT03622814 - Partners at Meals - Respite Care and Home (PAM) N/A
Recruiting NCT03672266 - Studies of Brain and Body Interaction