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Rivastigmine
Rivastigmine (sold under the trade name Exelon) is a parasympathomimetic or cholinergic agent that was developed by Novartis for the treatment of mild to moderate dementia of the Alzheimer’s type. In 2006, it became the first product approved globally for the treatment of mild to moderate dementia associated with Parkinson's Disease.[1] Rivastigmine has been available in capsule and liquid formulations since 1997.[2] In 2007 the rivastigmine transdermal patch became the first patch treatment for dementia. Rivastigmine tartrate is a white to off-white fine crystalline powder that is both lipophilic (soluble in fats) and hydrophilic (soluble in water). Rivastigmine is a cholinesterase inhibitor that inhibits both butyrylcholinesterase and acetylcholinesterase (unlike donepezil which is selective for acetylcholinesterase). It is thought that rivastigmine works by inhibiting these cholinesterase enzymes, which would otherwise break down the brain chemical acetylcholine.[3] Its efficacy is similar to donepezil and tacrine. Doses below 6mg/d may be ineffective. The effects of this kind of drugs in different kinds of dementia (including Alzheimer's dementia) are modest, and it is still unclear which AcCh(ButCh) esterase inhibitor is better in Parkinson's dementia, though rivastigmine is well-studied. We still do not have enough postmarketing clinical experience with rivastigmine patch, but initial reports are encouraging. Additional recommended knowledge
Clinical useThe FDA has approved rivastigmine capsules and rivastigmine patch for the treatment of mild to moderate dementia of the Alzheimer’s type and for mild to moderate dementia related to Parkinson's disease. It has been used in more than 6 million patients world-wide. Rivastigmine has demonstrated significant treatment effects on the cognitive (thinking and memory), functional (activities of daily living) and behavioural problems that are commonly associated with Alzheimer’s[4][5][6][7] and Parkinson's disease dementias.[8] In patients with either type of dementia, rivastigmine has been shown to provide meaningful symptomatic effects that may allow patients to remain independent and ‘be themselves’ for longer. In particular, rivastigmine appears to show marked treatment effects in patients showing a more course of aggressive disease, such as those with a younger age of onset, a poor nutritional status, or those experiencing symptoms such as delusions or hallucinations.[9] For example, the presence of hallucinations appears to be a predictor of especially strong responses to rivastigmine, both in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson's disease patients.[10][11] It has been proposed that these effects might reflect the additional inhibition of butyrylcholinesterase, which is implicated in symptom progression and might provide added benefits over acetylcholinesterase-selective drugs in some patients.[12][13] Multi-infarct dementia - may be slight improvement in executive functions and behaviour. The usage in schizophrenia patients - there are no firm evidences. On the other hand, it has been postulated that the strong potency of rivastigmine, provided by its dual inhibitory mechanism, leads to more nausea and vomiting during the titration phase of oral rivastigmine treatment (all cholinesterase inhibitors require doses to be increased gradually over several weeks, and this is usually referred to as the ‘titration phase’).[14] This enforces the importance of taking oral forms of these drugs as prescribed with food.[15] However, rates of nausea and vomiting are markedly reduced with the once-daily rivastigmine patch (which can be applied at any time of the day, with or without food). In a large clinical trial of the rivastigmine patch in 1,195 patients with Alzheimer’s disease, target dose 9.5 mg/24 hr patch provided similar clinical effects (e.g. memory and thinking, activities of daily living, concentration) as highest doses of rivastigmine capsules, but with three times fewer reports of nausea and vomiting. [16] Oral doses should be titrated with 3mg/d step every 2-4 weeks. Pregnancy category - B. Breastfeeding - there is no enough data. In case of overdosage - atropine was used against bradycardia. Dialysis is ineffective since short half-life of the drug. PharmacokineticsWhen given orally, rivastigmine is well absorbed with a bioavailability of about 40% in the 3 mg dose. Pharmacokinetics are linear up to 3 mg BID but non-linear at higher doses. Elimination is through the urine. Peak plasma concentrations are seen in about one hour, with peak CSF concentrations at 1.4-3.8 hours. When given by once-daily transdermal patch, the pharmacokinetic profile of rivastigmine is much smoother, compared with capsules, with lower peak plasma concentrations and reduced fluctuations.[17] The 9.5 mg/24 h rivastigmine patch provides comparable exposure to 12 mg/day capsules (the highest recommended oral dose). [18] The compound does cross the blood-brain barrier. Plasma protein binding is 40%.[19] The major route of metabolism for rivastigmine is by its target enzymes via cholinesterase-mediated hydrolysis. Elimination bypasses the hepatic system so hepatic cytochrome P450 (CYP) isoenzymes are not involved.[20] It has been suggested that this means there is a low potential for drug-drug interactions (which could lead to adverse effects) between rivastigmine and the many common drugs that use the cytochrome P450 metabolic pathway.[21] References
See also
Categories: Antidementia agents | Novartis | Anticholinesterases |
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Rivastigmine". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |