AI Article Synopsis

  • The study addresses the limitations of current Alzheimer's treatments, particularly donepezil and xanomeline, which cause significant gastrointestinal side effects leading to poor patient compliance.
  • Researchers tested donepezil, xanomeline, and a new drug called PQCA in rhesus macaques to evaluate their effects on cognition and side effects.
  • Results showed that while donepezil and xanomeline caused GI issues at low doses, PQCA showed no such side effects, suggesting it could be a more tolerable and effective option for improving cognitive symptoms in Alzheimer's patients.

Article Abstract

Rationale: The standards of care for Alzheimer's disease, acetylcholinesterase inhibitors such as donepezil (Aricept®), are dose-limited due to adverse side-effects. These adverse events lead to significant patient non-compliance, constraining the dose and magnitude of efficacy that can be achieved. Non-selective muscarinic receptor orthosteric agonists such as Xanomeline have been shown to be effective in treating symptoms as well, but were also poorly tolerated. Therefore, there is an unmet medical need for a symptomatic treatment that improves symptoms and is better tolerated.

Methods: We compared donepezil, xanomeline, and the novel selective muscarinic 1 receptor positive allosteric modulator PQCA in combination with donepezil in the object retrieval detour (ORD) cognition test in rhesus macaque. Gastrointestinal (GI) side effects (salivation and feces output) were then assessed with all compounds to determine therapeutic window.

Results: All three compounds significantly reduced a scopolamine-induced deficit in ORD. Consistent with what is observed clinically in patients, both donepezil and xanomeline produced significant GI effects in rhesus at doses equal to or less than a fivefold margin from the minimum effective dose that improves cognition. In stark contrast, PQCA produced no GI side effects when tested at the same dose range.

Conclusions: These data suggest M1 positive allosteric modulators have the potential to improve cognition in Alzheimer's disease with a greater therapeutic margin than the current standard of care, addressing an important unmet medical need.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-014-3813-xDOI Listing

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