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Drug may delay nursing home
placement for dementia patients
Newswise — Publishing in the September issue of
Alzheimer’s Disease and Associated Disorders researchers from
the University of South Florida’s Louis de la Parte Florida Mental
Health Institute’s (FMHI) Department of Mental Health, Law and
Policy and the School of Aging Studies report finding that treating
dementia patients with cholinesterase inhibitors (ChE-Is) may delay
placement into nursing homes and provide improved quality of life
while helping preserve personal and societal resources.
“Dementia is a very debilitating condition,” said co-author
Ross Andel of the USF School of Aging Studies and the Florida
Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center. “It affects up to 10 percent of
adults over 65 and can account for up to 70 percent of the long-term
care, nursing home population. This study provided evidence that
treatment with ChE-Is can delay nursing home placement by an average
of three and a half months, possibly as a function of temporary
stabilization of cognitive and functional abilities.”
According to the Alzheimer’s Association (http://www.alz.org),
ChE-Is are designed to increase levels of acetylcholine, a chemical
messenger involved in memory and thought processing. The drug, first
approved by the FDA in 1993, is known by several trade names,
including Aricept, Exelon and Razadyne
To carry out this study, researchers used records from the
Florida Medicaid program to follow separate groups of patients over
age 60 with dementia who were either taking or not taking ChE-Is and
had not been placed in a nursing home.
“The group of patients who were already taking ChE-Is were
significantly older and included more women,” said lead author
Marion Becker of FMHI. “That those taking ChE-Is were placed in a
nursing home more than three months later than those not taking the
drug has implications not only for patients and their families, but
for controlling the rising costs of Medicaid.”
Cost effectiveness is also a consideration when expensive
drugs are used in the Medicaid system.
“The cost of the therapy can be off-set by the financial
benefits that come with nursing home placement delay,” Becker added.