Introduction
Apathy, defined as the absence or lack of feeling, emotion, interest, concern, or motivation not attributable to cognitive impairment, emotional distress, or a decreased level of consciousness, is a common neuropsychiatric syndrome in Alzheimer’s disease (AD).Reference Starkstein, Petracca, Chemerinski and Kremer 1 Apathy is seen to occur early in the clinical course of the illness and progresses in concert with declining cognitive function.Reference Mega, Cummings, Fiorello and Gornbein 2 Apathetic AD patients often have more rapid cognitive decline,Reference Starkstein, Jorge, Mizrahi and Robinson 3 and are more impaired on activities of daily living.Reference Freels, Cohen and Eisdorfer 4 Up to 80% of AD patients experience some degree of apathy during the course of their illness,Reference Mega, Cummings, Fiorello and Gornbein 2 depending on the assessment scale, type of population studied, diagnostic criteria, and by type and severity of AD.Reference Guimaraes, Levy, Teixeira, Beato and Caramelli 5 Apathy tends to first appear in the prodromal stage of AD,Reference Apostolova and Cummings 6 and increases as the illness progresses from MCI to dementia along the spectrum of neurocognitive disorders (NCD). For example, one study showed a prevalence of 42% for mild, 80% for moderate, and 92% for advanced stages of AD.Reference Mega, Cummings, Fiorello and Gornbein 2 In another cohort study of patients with probable AD, apathy was associated with an increased risk of death.Reference Vilalta-Franch, Calvo-Perxas, Garre-Olmo, Turro-Garriga and Lopez-Pousa 7 Despite its high prevalence, treatment of symptomatic apathy in AD has not been well studied.
Assessment/diagnosis of apathy in AD
Proposed as an independent syndrome separate from depression, apathy symptoms are put into a set of diagnostic criteria that are now validated for use in AD and stroke.Reference Marin 8 - Reference Starkstein and Manes 11 Robert and colleagues proposed that for diagnosing apathy in AD, (1) the core feature of apathy (diminished motivation) must be present for at least four weeks; (2) two of the three dimensions of apathy (reduced goal-directed behavior, goal-directed cognitive activity, and emotions) must also be present; (3) there should be identifiable functional impairments attributable to apathy; and (4) criteria are specified to exclude symptoms and states that mimic apathy.Reference Robert, Onyike and Leentjens 12
A limitation of current data with the available diagnostic criteria is that most studies were performed prior to the development and validation of these criteria, which makes the evaluation of the evidence challenging. Nonetheless, most assessments of apathy in clinical samples use scales to measure the severity or to differentiate apathy from depression by excluding symptoms such as sadness and negative thoughts that are typically observed in depressive syndromes.
The Apathy Evaluation Scale (AES), a Likert-Like scale measure, was developed by Marin and colleagues.Reference Marin, Biedrzycki and Firinciogullari 13 This measure consists of three sections (with 18 items each) and allows collection of information on the symptoms from an informant, the clinician, and the patient. A shorter version is adapted for nursing home patients.Reference Lueken, Seidl, Volker, Schweiger, Kruse and Schroder 14 The Apathy Scale (AS), developed by Starkstein and co-workers, is an examiner-rated scale with 14 items based on the Marin’s instrument.Reference Starkstein, Mayberg, Preziosi, Andrezejewski, Leiguarda and Robinson 15 Robert and colleagues developed the Likert-style Apathy Inventory (AI) built on Marin and colleagues’ diagnostic criteria for apathy.Reference Robert, Clairet and Benoit 16 This 12-item scale collects information from both the patient and the caregiver by “yes/no” responses, and deals with behavioral changes that have occurred since the beginning of the disease. The caregiver section is structured similarly to the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI)Reference Cummings, Mega, Gray, Rosenbergthompson, Carusi and Gornbein 17 such that when the caregiver response is negative, a score of zero is attributed and the rater proceeds to the next item. If the response is positive, frequency and severity of the items are explored. Strauss and Sperry developed the informant-based 16-item uni-dimensional Dementia Apathy Interview and Rating (DAIR) scale to assess apathy among individuals with cognitive decline.Reference Strauss and Sperry 18 This instrument collects information from the patient and an appropriate informant, and takes into consideration other sources such as patients’ medical records or information from other medical providers. These scales are developed to capture apathy in patients with cognitive impairment, and are not specific to AD. They employ different approaches and constructs, and assess and capture the apathy severity-spectrum, which can affect the prevalence rate. This variation in the assessment method affects treatment evaluation and patient enrollment for clinical trials.
Neurobiology of apathy in AD
Currently there is no guideline for treating apathy in AD, even though the many neurobiological hypotheses linking apathy to neuronal correlates has led to the development of a multitude of psychotropic medications.Reference Guimaraes, Levy, Teixeira, Beato and Caramelli 5 The neurobiological hypotheses are based on the observation of patient groups with neurological or psychiatric impairment, suggesting that apathy arises from dysfunction of frontal-subcortical networks (namely amygdala, nucleus accumbens, and prefrontal cortex [PFC]).Reference Theleritis, Politis, Siarkos and Lyketsos 19 - Reference Craig, Cummings and Fairbanks 21 The three sub-domains of apathy, including dysfunctional emotion processing, dysfunctional cognitive activity, and reduced self-activation, arise from impairment of the orbital, dorsolateral, and medial PFC, respectively. Neuroimaging studies of AD patients have supported this hypothesis, correlating apathy with dysfunction in key regions of the PFC-basal ganglia circuitry, including orbitofrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), inferior frontal cortex, caudate nucleus, and putamen nucleus.Reference Lanctot, Moosa and Herrmann 22 - Reference Bruen, McGeown, Shanks and Venneri 24 Dysfunction of these regions may have a neurochemical aetiology; that is, the putative mechanisms of AD pathogenesis (i.e. amyloid plaque formation, and hyper-phosphorylated tau aggregation) compromise neurotransmitter systems in the PFC-basal ganglia circuitry, giving rise to apathy symptoms.Reference Cummings 25 There are several important neurotransmitter-based hypotheses regarding the factors that exert an influence on the neuronal circuitry, including dopamine depletion, dysfunction of serotonin (5-HT), cholinergic and glutamate deficiency, and reduction of central GABA concentration. While a detailed review of the neurobiology of apathy is beyond the scope of the current work, we will highlight the main hypotheses.
The dopamine depletion hypothesis is supported by studies demonstrating reduced D2-like receptor density and lower levels of dopamine transporter in the striatum of AD patients with apathy.Reference Mitchell, Herrmann and Lanctot 26 - Reference David, Koulibaly and Benoit 28 In one study, a lower level of dopamine transporters in the caudate and putamen correlated with a lack of interest and initiative.Reference David, Koulibaly and Benoit 28 In light of the aforementioned neuroanatomical correlates these data seem to suggest that dopaminergic tone in the basal ganglia-ACC-frontal cortex circuitry, which is involved in motivated and goal-directed behaviour, is diminished in patients with AD and potentially mediates the apathetic behaviour. The link between disorders of central dopaminergic hypo-function (e.g. restless leg syndromeReference Smith, Kramer and Ma 30 and extrapyramidal symptomsReference Starkstein, Merello, Brockman, Bruce, Petracca and Power 31 ) and apathy symptoms in AD provides additional evidence for diminished dopaminergic tone. Importantly, impairment of this system is associated with decline in cognitive functioning, mainly in attention and working memory. The dopamine hypotheses points to the use of dopaminergic agents or stimulants such s methylphenidate in treating apathy.
Serotonin, although controversial, tends to inhibit dopamine transmission.Reference Sasaki-Adams and Kelley 32 Dysfunction of the 5-HT system is widespread and varied in AD: 5-HT denervation of serotonin-releasing neurons is observed in the medial and dorsal raphe nuclei; levels of 5-HT and its primary metabolite are 40-80% lower compared to non-AD controls; synaptic densities of 5-HT1,2,4,6 receptors are altered; and 5-HT transporter density is reduced by 20-40% in AD patients with apathy.Reference Rodriguez, Noristani and Verkhratsky 33 These changes are present in the aforementioned neuroanatomical correlates of apathy. Additionally, correlation between 5-HT dysfunction with depressive symptoms in AD has been reported.Reference Rodriguez, Noristani and Verkhratsky 33 For instance, one study linked 5HT dysfunction and depression severity with hypo-metabolism in the dorsolateral PFC. Given the considerable overlap between depression and apathy symptoms, the results of this study indirectly supports a role for 5-HT in apathetic behaviour. Based on considerable overlap of symptoms between depression and apathy, serotonergic and dopaminergic medications are reasonable treatment options for apathy in AD. However, this seems counterintuitive when apathy assessment scales attempt to exclude patients with depression. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) antidepressants are theoretically the treatment of choice under this hypothesis.
Evidence for the acetylcholine hypothesis suggests that primary concentrations of cholinergic neurons in the brain originate from the nucleus basalis (positioned between the frontal cortex and cingulate gyrus,Reference Cummings and Back 34 two regions consistently correlated with apathy) that is significantly diminished in AD. The Glutamate hypothesis, on the other hand, emerges from therapeutic studies suggests a link between the glutamatergic system and apathy symptoms. Drug trials have demonstrated a role for glutamate receptor agonists in improving the negative symptoms of schizophrenia.Reference Zink and Correll 35 , Reference Gibert-Rahola and Villena-Rodriguez 36 In AD, a double-blind RCT of mibampator, a glutamate receptor potentiator, significantly improved apathy in the treated group.Reference Chappell, Gonzales, Williams, Witte, Mohs and Sperling 37 In addition, recent trials on cholinesterase inhibitors suggest some efficacy on apathy symptoms in AD patients.Reference Cummings 38 The acetylcholine and glutamate hypotheses are the underlying reasons for using cholinesterase inhibitors or NMDA receptor agonists (e.g., memantine), respectively, for the management of apathy in AD.
Regarding the GABA system impairment in AD, studies report reduction of central GABA concentration (predominantly in late-stage AD) and up-regulation of GABAa receptors.Reference Lanctot, Herrmann, Mazzotta, Khan and Ingber 39 Although one study did correlate GABA reduction and GABAa receptor up-regulation with depressive symptoms, direct evidence correlating GABA dysfunction to apathy is lacking.Reference Garcia-Alloza, Tsang and Gil-Bea 40 Although direct evidence correlating norepinephrine (NE) with apathy is also lacking, the link between apathy and inattention, which is effectively treated by adrenergic agents in ADHD patients, lends support to NE as a basis for apathy in AD.Reference Herrmann, Rothenburg and Black 41 Mood stabilizers or other multi-action compounds are presumed to be the suitable agents under these hypotheses.
The putative neurochemical underpinnings of apathy and the considerable clinical overlap between depression and apathy have prompted the use of various psychotropic medications in apathetic AD patients. However, individual drug trials have yielded mixed results, probably because most studies have not considered the temporal relationship between neurochemical dysfunction and AD pathogenesis. For example, 5-HT1a receptors are up-regulated in mild cognitive impairment,Reference Truchot, Costes and Zimmer 42 but are significantly decreased in later stages of AD.Reference Rodriguez, Noristani and Verkhratsky 33 The drug’s effects may therefore be stage-specific. In addition, many scales for apathy are based on older definitions, which largely focus on lack of motivation. Due to the established role of dopamine in the brain reward system,Reference Schultz 29 these scales may detect changes resulting from dopaminergic therapy, but may less reliably detect non-dopaminergic drugs’ effects on the emotional and cognitive domains of apathy. Similarly, variable diagnostic criteria may have skewed the treatment effects. Furthermore, most studies targeted a single neurotransmitter system. Given the multiple neurochemical alterations in apathetic AD patients and the interconnectedness of neurotransmitter systems,Reference Smith, Kramer and Ma 30 , Reference Zhang, Zhou and Dani 43 , Reference Garcia-Alloza, Gil-Bea and Diez-Ariza 44 drug therapy that has multiple mechanisms of action with tailored affinity may produce larger treatment effects.
Evidence from open-label trials
Twelve open-label trials were examined based on our search criteria for this meta-analysis. Five studies examined donepezil;Reference Lopez, Mackell and Sun 45 - Reference Yatabe, Hashimoto and Kaneda 49 three, rivastigmine;Reference Cumbo and Ligori 46 , Reference Cummings, Koumaras, Chen and Mirski 50 , Reference Chan, Chan and Li 51 two, galantamine;Reference Cumbo and Ligori 46 , Reference Chu, Yik, Mok and Chung 52 one, memantine;Reference Cumbo and Ligori 46 one, gabapentin;Reference Moretti, Torre, Antonello, Cazzato and Bava 53 one, citalopram;Reference Scharre, Davis, Warner, Chang and Beversdorf 54 one, methylphenidate;Reference Padala, Burke and Shostrom 55 and one, atypical antipsychotic.Reference Street, Clark and Kadam 56 For these studies, average age ranged from 66 to 83 years. Average follow-up time was 31 weeks. Only one study examined apathy as a primary outcome (all others used the NPI-Apathy subscale).Reference Padala, Burke and Shostrom 55 Most studies did not report a statistically significant change from baseline. A small, statistically significant improvement from baseline was observed in two of three rivastigmine trials, and one of three donepezil trials. A relatively large statistically significant improvement in AES was reported in the methylphenidate study (n=23; baseline: 52.70 [6.7]; endpoint: 32.43 [5.7]; p<0.00010.) Both galantamine trials reported a trend towards worsening apathy as examined by the NPI subscale, and one trial was statistically significant [n=33; baseline: 0.38 (0.2); endpoint: 1.44 (0.54); p=0.045]. Basically, from open label studies we see mixed results, with heterogeneity in drugs used, sample, and assessment approaches, which renders generalizability difficult.
Recent systematic reviews highlighted the challenge in using any compound for management of apathy in AD Reference Rea, Carotenuto, Fasanaro, Traini and Amenta 57 and indirectly suggest that the treatment effect may be scale-dependent.Reference Lanctot, Aguera-Ortiz and Brodaty 58 Additionally, current systematic reviews of neuropsychiatric pharmacotherapy are lacking specificity for apathy outcome and are confounded by poor reporting methods.Reference Rodda, Morgan and Walker 59 - Reference Berman, Brodaty, Withall and Seeher 63 Taking into account of these limitations, experts have recently recommended that studies investigating apathy in neurodegenerative disease should A) look for the correlation between depression and apathy, B) look for treatment duration of 3 months or more, C) control for concomitant medications, D) control for history of stroke, E) and diagnostic assessment methods.Reference Cummings, Friedman and Garibaldi 64 Thus, we examined the available RCTs by taking into account these moderating variables.
Material and Methods
Eligibility criteria, Information sources & Search
On March 3, 2014, we conducted a search of the following databases for placebo-controlled RCTs (either parallel-group or cross-over): MEDLINE (1946-2014), EMBASE (1974-2014), PsycINFO (1597-2014), and the Cochrane Register of Controlled Trials (March 2014 issue). Additionally, we scanned http://www.clinicaltrials.gov and the reference lists of relevant systematic reviews.Reference Lanctot, Aguera-Ortiz and Brodaty 58 , Reference Cummings, Friedman and Garibaldi 64 The search was subsequently updated on June 25, 2015.
To be included, studies had to report on adult patients (>=40 years old) with Alzheimer’s disease; trial an on-market, single-entity psychotropic medication; and used a validated instrument to measure apathy severity or presence. Studies merging data in the absence of duplicates were included.
Study selections
Two authors (AAS and MS) independently screened titles and abstracts with a priori set selection criteria. Subsequently, they independently screened the full-text of the possible studies to verify for the availability of data. In cases of disagreements, discussion followed until they were resolved by consensus with the senior author (GYRH).
Data abstraction
One author abstracted data including characteristics of study participants, type of intervention, and apathy outcome data. A second author checked the data extraction for accuracy.
Bias, heterogeneity and effect size
Both visual and qualitative methods were used to examine for publication bias. Heterogeneity’s presence and magnitude was examined using the q-statistics and I-square. An aggregate random effect Hedge’s g effect size estimate was calculated using the comprehensive meta-analysis to examine the global magnitude in group differences (treatment vs. control).Reference Borenstein, Hedges and Higgins 65 In the absence of descriptive statistics (mean and standard deviation), when appropriate, p-values and sample size as reported by studies were used to generate the effect size. In the absence of reported exact non-significant p-values, alpha 0.06 (a liberal assumption) was used for analysis.
Results
Study selection
The literature search for RCTs yielded 1193 citations from the search engines. Of the 678 unique abstracts, 49 were eligible for full-text review. Two authors (AAS and MS) independently reviewed and excluded articles, leaving 15 articles that met our entry criteria, which were included in our systematic review and meta-analysis (see Figure 1, flow diagram).
Study characteristics
The amalgam of studies examined cholinesterase inhibitors, including three donepezil trials and one galantamine trial;Reference Herrmann, Rabheru, Wang and Binder 66 four memantine trials;Reference Araki, Wake and Miyaoka 67 - Reference Cummings, Schneider, Tariot and Graham 70 three psycho-stimulant trials;Reference Herrmann, Rothenburg and Black 41 , Reference Frakey, Salloway, Buelow and Malloy 71 , Reference Rosenberg, Lanctot and Drye 72 two atypical antipsychotic trials;Reference Paleacu, Barak, Mirecky and Mazeh 73 , Reference Streim, Porsteinsson and Breder 74 and two trials in which the active treatment was classified as “other.”Reference Mohs, Shiovitz, Tariot, Porsteinsson, Baker and Feldman 75 , Reference Peskind, Tsuang and Bonner 76 These fifteen RCTs included 2819 active compound treated and 2045 placebo-treated patients (total=4864). The average follow-up for each drug class varied. For the NMDA category, 24 and 28 weeks were the minimum and maximum duration of trials, respectively. For cholinesterase inhibitors, 12 and 24 weeks were the minimum and maximum median duration of treatment. For stimulant, 2 to 8 weeks was the treatment duration. For category “others,” duration was 6 and 24 weeks.
Both severity of dementia and class of drug varied across trials. For studies reporting demographic values, the average age, MMSE score, and NPI total score of the treated patients ranged from 73.3 to 86, 7.8 to 24.1, and 6.8 to 36.7, respectively. Furthermore, global samples ranged from 22 to 2033, and overall included more female participants (percent male ranged from 17 to 50). The minimum sample size for treatment was 11 and the maximum was 1347; for placebo arms the minimum sample size was 13 and the maximum was 686 patients (Please see Table 1 for details).
Data synthesis
For cognitive enhancers (donepezil and galantamine), no significant apathy treatment effect was observed (Hedges’ g=-0.055; 95% CI: -0.322 to 0.213; P-value=0.687; Q-value=17.378; P-value=0.001; I2=82.737; N=4.) The average donepezil dosage was 10mg/day (three studies) while galantamine dosage ranged between 16 and 32 mg/day (an aggregate of data from trials). With the exception of one study, all studies used the NPI-apathy subscale as an outcome measure. These trials included mild to severe AD.
NPI-NH: Neuropsychiatric Inventory-Nursing Home version; AES: Apathy Examination Scale; SIB: Severe Impairment Battery; ADCS-ADL: Alzheimer’s Disease Co-operative Study - Activities of Daily Living Inventory; FrSBe: Frontal Systems Behavior Scale; ADAS-Cog: Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale – Cognitive; CGIC: Clinical Global Impression of Change; NR: Not reported. Scores for age, MMSE, and NPI are in mean and (SD).
* mean age and %male is based on the full sample;
** Included patient data from Feldman et al 2001Reference Feldman, Gauthier and Hecker 85 ;
*** MMSE Score is for trial completers only. NR: not reported; NS: Not specified. Depression assessment was defined by using any scale that report on depressive symptoms
For NMDA category (memantine), a small and non-significant effect size estimate yielded in favour of treatment (Hedges’ g=0.092; 95% CI: -0.134 to 0.318; P-value=0.423; Q-value=11.425; P-value=0.010; I2=73.742; N=4.) All memantine trials reported the same average dosage (20 mg/day), included moderate to severe AD, and used the NPI-apathy subscale.
For psycho-simulant, compared to placebo, a small and non-significant treatment effect yielded (Hedges’ g= -0.063; 95% CI: -1.067 to 0.941; P-value=0.903; Q-value= 12.486; P-value=0.002; I2=83.982; N=3.) All stimulant trials included mild to moderate AD and used multiple scales, including NPI-apathy and FrSBe apathy subscale. This analysis included mixed drugs with non-comparable dosage.
For antipsychotics and “other” classes of drugs with antidepressant properties, not enough studies (N<3) were reported to allow analysis and support their use. Individual atypical antipsychotic studies did not support their use for apathy in AD.Reference Paleacu, Barak, Mirecky and Mazeh 73 , Reference Streim, Porsteinsson and Breder 74
The analysis for psycho-stimulants was underpowered due to limited patient enrolment in each arm of the trials, but not so for ChEI and NMDA. Given the limited number of studies included under each drug class, examination of heterogeneity or publication bias was not possible. However, under each drug class, informants provided a majority of the collateral information, and little, but not quantifiable discrepancy was observed in terms of the type of studies (RCT, or retrospective data from RCT’s), or whether the study was primarily or secondarily investigating apathy (Please see Figure 2 for details).
Discussion and conclusion
To our knowledge this is the first meta-analysis examining the effect of multiple compounds for management of apathy in AD. This meta-analysis examined fifteen studies and found limited evidence to support the use of any of the medications we examined for management of apathy in AD. However, significant heterogeneity was observed under each drug class that we could not explain given the limited number of studies.
We speculate that the lack of an effect could be due to the clinical heterogeneity in the sample included. For example, AD severity ranged from early stage to severe. Thus, future studies should focus on one stage for more homogeneous effect. Additionally, the lack of an effect could be due to methodological issues. For example, sample size, attrition, using the last observation carried forward,Reference Molnar, Hutton and Fergusson 77 or use of a modified intention-to-treat approaches,Reference Liberati, Altman and Tetzlaff 78 could have masked treatment effect. Unfortunately, because of limited number of studies under each drug class, further analysis and controlling for these factors were not possible. Moreover, we excluded many controlled trials because they did not report the NPI breakdown on apathy sub-score (we did not contact authors for pertinent information). The results may also be confounded by publication bias, and we have not examined the effect of compounds’ affinity for specific neurotransmitter(s) in order to provide the neurobiological underpinning for specific treatment approaches. Also, our means aggregate did not examine the proportion of patients showing benefit versus no change or deterioration. Further assessment of clinical response and tolerance with respect to this difference is warranted, since this can vary within the same class of drugs.Reference Sepehry, Lee, Hsiung and Jacova 79
Conclusion
Direction for future research
The inability of current pharmacotherapy to provide a clinically meaningful effect on apathy may be a result of the drugs’ ineffectiveness. However, owing to methodological limitations, the drugs’ apparent ineffectiveness may be an artifact of poor trial designs that we have not systematically examined.Reference Schneider, Mangialasche and Andreasen 80 In support of a poor trial design hypothesis, we postulate methodological issues that might account for the lack of observable treatment effect on apathy. First, all trials used either NPI-apathy sub-score or AES to assess apathy; none use the newly proposed diagnostic criteria for apathy in AD. While NPI-apathy and AES are the most widely used and psychometrically robust apathy scales,Reference Clarke, Ko, Kuhl, van Reekum, Salvador and Marin 81 they largely define apathy as a lack of motivation; therefore, they may not fully capture the pleomorphic nature of apathy in AD. Other scales that are based on clearly defined and validated diagnostic criteria Reference Robert, Onyike and Leentjens 12 that also differentiate depression from apathy, such as the apathy inventory (AI) Reference Robert, Clairet and Benoit 16 or the expanded NPI (NPI-C), Reference de Medeiros, Robert and Gauthier 82 may better distinguish the apathetic AD patients’ emotional, cognitive, and behavioral deficits.
Direction for practice
Given the limited efficacy of the available drug options, we don’t see supporting evidence for pharmacotherapy as a first-line treatment for apathy in AD. Several types of non-drug interventions have demonstrated a positive effect in at least a few trials,Reference Brodaty and Burns 83 which could represent potentially safer alternatives.
Where a patient with severe apathy fails adequate trials of multiple non-pharmacological treatments, a cautiously monitored trial of add-on methylphenidate or a switch to rivastigmine is reasonable. The methylphenidate RCT reported by Rosenberg et al. demonstrated the largest effect size. While no rivastigmine RCT fit our eligibility criteria in our current analysis, this compound demonstrated the largest effect on apathy in open label studies.Reference Gauthier, Juby, Dalziel, Rehel, Schecter and investigators 84 Consistent with a current view of the literature,Reference Lanctot, Aguera-Ortiz and Brodaty 58 we recognize that the results of the methylphenidate RCT must be replicated in a larger RCT using validated diagnostic and assessment tools before the drug can be more widely recommended.
Acknowledgements and Funding
We wish to acknowledge the reviewers’ diligent revision of this work and comments on content.
Disclosures
AS received post-doctoral fellowships from the Alzheimer’s Society of Canada and Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration in Aging (ASC/CCNA). GYRH received funds as a site investigator for clinical trials sponsored by TauRx, Roche, Eli Lilly, AstraZeneca, Biogen, Merck, and Genentech; participated in educational program development sponsored by Merck. MS has no disclosures.
Statement of Authorship
Study concept and design: MS, AS; acquisition, analysis, and interpretation of data: all authors; drafting of the manuscript: MS, AS; critical revision of the manuscript for intellectual content: AS, GYRH; statistical analyses: AS; supervision: GYRH.