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Letter to the EditorFull Access

Dr. Devanand Replies

To the Editor: Dr. Frisoni and colleagues report that in Alzheimer’s patients with behavioral disturbances, a program of nonpharmacologic intervention in special care units was successful. Whereas this approach may indeed work in many patients with dementia, methodologic flaws in their study make it difficult to draw any firm conclusions. Patients were not randomly assigned to the special care units or to traditional nursing homes, and this probably contributed to the patients in the special care units having significantly more severe behavioral disturbances than the patients in traditional nursing homes. The well-known statistical phenomenon of regression to the mean, whereby outliers at one assessment time tend to drift closer to the mean at the next assessment, may partly explain the observed clinical improvement, especially because the group in the special care units started with more severe behavioral disturbances and, hence, was more likely to move down toward the mean. Also, placebo-controlled pharmacotherapy trials of behavioral disturbances in patients with dementia consistently report placebo response rates ranging from 20%–50%, and it is common for patients taking placebo to show considerable improvements in behavioral symptoms (13). Therefore, in the absence of an adequate control group, the nearly identical decrease in symptoms in the special care unit and nursing home groups (38% and 41%, respectively) is difficult to interpret.

The group in the special care units had significantly less physical restraint than the group in traditional nursing homes, but apparently there was no difference in the use of psychotropic medications between the two groups. This suggests that physical restraints do not work well and may not be advisable but also that no conclusions can be drawn about the use of psychotropic medications. In essence, this de facto experimental intervention was to avoid physical restraint in the group in the special care units and to permit restraint in the group in traditional nursing homes. Therefore, the authors’ claim that nonpharmacologic, environmental interventions should be the first-line option for Alzheimer’s inpatients with behavioral disturbances is a fairly big leap beyond what their data show. To reach such a conclusion, a randomized, head-to-head, controlled comparison of pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic interventions needs to be conducted—something that has never been done.

References

1. Barnes R, Veith R, Okimoto J, Raskind M, Gumbrecht G: Efficacy of antipsychotic medications in behaviorally disturbed dementia patients. Am J Psychiatry 1982; 139:1170–1174 Google Scholar

2. Schneider LS, Pollock VE, Lyness SA: A meta-analysis of controlled trials of neuroleptic treatment in dementia. J Am Geriatr Soc 1990; 38:553–563Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

3. Tariot PN, Erb R, Podgorski CA, Cox C, Patel S, Jakimovich L, Irvine C: Efficacy and tolerability of carbamazepine for agitation and aggression in dementia. Am J Psychiatry 1998; 155:54–61LinkGoogle Scholar