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The ADAS‐cog and clinically meaningful change in the VISTA clinical trial of galantamine for Alzheimer's disease
Author(s) -
Rockwood Kenneth,
Fay Sherri,
Gorman Mary
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
international journal of geriatric psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.28
H-Index - 129
eISSN - 1099-1166
pISSN - 0885-6230
DOI - 10.1002/gps.2319
Subject(s) - galantamine , clinical trial , alzheimer's disease , medicine , clinical endpoint , disease , psychology , dementia , donepezil
Background A minimum 4‐point change at 6 months on the Alzheimer's disease assessment scale‐cognitive subscale (ADAS‐cog) is deemed clinically important, but this cut‐point has been little studied in relation to clinical meaningfulness. In an investigator‐initiated, clinical trial of galantamine, we investigated the extent to which a 4‐point change classifies goal attainment by individual patients. Methods Secondary analysis of the video imaging synthesis of treating Alzheimer's disease (VISTA) study: a 4‐month, multi‐centre, parallel‐group, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled, trial of galantamine in 130 mild‐moderate Alzheimer's disease patients (4‐month open‐label follow‐up). ADAS‐cog responses at 6 months were compared with outcomes on three clinical measures: clinician's interview based impression of change‐plus caregiver input (CIBIC+), patient/carer‐goal attainment scaling (PGAS) and clinician‐GAS (CGAS). Results Thirty‐seven of 99 patients improved by ≥ 4 points on the ADAS‐cog at 6 months, and 16/99 showed ≥ 4‐point worsening. ADAS‐cog change scores correlated notionally to modestly with changes on the CGAS ( r = −0.31), the PGAS ( r = −0.29) and the CIBIC+ ( r = 0.31). As a group, patients with ADAS‐cog improvement were significantly more likely to improve on the clinical measures; those who worsened showed non‐significant clinical decline. Individually, about half were misclassified in relation to each clinical measure; often when the ADAS‐Cog detected ‘no change’, clinically meaningful effects could be detected. Even so, no ADAS‐Cog cut‐point optimally classified patients' clinical responses. Conclusion A 4‐point ADAS‐cog change at 6 months is clinically meaningful for groups. Substantial individual misclassification between the ADAS‐cog and clinical measures suggests no inherent meaning to a 4‐point ADAS‐cog change for a given patient. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.