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Psychosis in Alzheimer disease — mechanisms, genetics and therapeutic opportunities

Psychosis is a common and distressing symptom in people with Alzheimer disease, and few safe and effective treatments are available. However, new approaches to symptom assessment and treatment are beginning to drive the field forward. New nosological perspectives have been provided by incorporating...

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Published in:Nature reviews. Neurology 2022-03, Vol.18 (3), p.131-144
Main Authors: Ismail, Zahinoor, Creese, Byron, Aarsland, Dag, Kales, Helen C., Lyketsos, Constantine G., Sweet, Robert A., Ballard, Clive
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Psychosis is a common and distressing symptom in people with Alzheimer disease, and few safe and effective treatments are available. However, new approaches to symptom assessment and treatment are beginning to drive the field forward. New nosological perspectives have been provided by incorporating the emergence of psychotic symptoms in older adults — even in advance of dementia — into epidemiological and neurobiological frameworks as well as into diagnostic and research criteria such as the International Psychogeriatric Association criteria for psychosis in neurocognitive disorders, the Alzheimer’s Association International Society to Advance Alzheimer’s Research and Treatment (ISTAART) research criteria for psychosis in neurodegenerative disease, and the ISTAART criteria for mild behavioural impairment. Here, we highlight the latest findings in genomics, neuroimaging and neurobiology that are informing approaches to drug discovery and repurposing. Current pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment options are discussed, with a focus on safety and precision medicine. We also explore trial data for pimavanserin, a novel agent that shows promise for the treatment of psychosis in people with dementia, and discuss existing agents that might be useful but need further exploration such as escitalopram, lithium, cholinesterase inhibitors and vitamin D. Although the assessment and management of psychosis in people with dementia remain challenging, new opportunities are providing direction and hope to the field. Psychosis is a common symptom of Alzheimer disease (AD) and few treatments are available. In this Review, the authors describe the main features of psychosis in AD and other dementias and consider how recent mechanistic insights are informing new treatment approaches. Key points Psychosis is surprisingly common in Alzheimer disease (AD) and can emerge as part of the neurodegenerative disease process in advance of dementia during the mild cognitive impairment stage or even earlier. Subtypes of psychotic symptoms — that is, persecutory versus misidentification delusions or delusions versus hallucinations — have different trajectories and neurobiological correlates. Both schizophrenia and AD risk genes might be involved in AD psychosis. Tau tangle burden and kalirin-mediated synaptic dysfunction seem to be neurobiological components of psychosis in AD. Of the currently available antipsychotic drugs, aripiprazole seems to provide the best balance betwee
ISSN:1759-4758
1759-4766
1759-4766
DOI:10.1038/s41582-021-00597-3