| Huperzine A study seeks alternative Alzheimer’s treatment
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2006-02-03 Monika Guttman A
clinical trial to test the Chinese herb Huperzia serrata—known
commercially as huperzine A—as a treatment for early or mild
Alzheimer’s disease is underway at USC, announced Lon Schneider,
professor of psychiatry, neurology and gerontology at the Keck School
of Medicine of USC.
Schneider,
who is spearheading USC’s participation in the multi-center Phase
II trial sponsored by the National Institute on Aging, noted that
earlier trials suggested huperzine A works much like some of the main
medications now prescribed to treat Alzheimer’s symptoms. “Aricept,
Razadyne, Exelon—the current drugs used to ease Alzheimer’s
symptoms—are expensive and have side effects,” he said. “What’s
potentially attractive about huperzine is that it’s an herb that’s
been chewed by people over the course of centuries because of its
cholinergic effects. It’s very available and easy to extract from
the plant, may have fewer side effects and would cost much less than
the current drugs for Alzheimer’s disease.”
Current
medications like Aricept inhibit acetylcholinesterase, an enzyme that
deactivates the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Acetylcholine is
involved in memory and learning. By inhibiting the enzyme that breaks
it down, more acetylcholine continues to be available to stimulate
neurons. Medications that block acetylcholinesterase may improve
symptoms in some patients but do not stop the progression of
Alzheimer’s.
Huperzine
A, a naturally occurring compound found in a moss from the tropical
woodland regions of China, has long been used by traditional healers
as a fever and inflammation remedy. The compound is extracted from a
Chinese herbal plant named Huperzia serrata, Shuangyiping, or Qian
Ceng Ta. Huperzine A has become the most commonly prescribed
medication in China for Alzheimer’s disease and other memory
disorders, and appears to be able to improve memory loss and possibly
slow the emergence of some symptoms of Alzheimer’s, especially in
the early stages.
Delaying
onset of some symptoms may delay the onset of disability. Finding a
treatment that could delay onset by even five years could reduce the
number of individuals with Alzheimer’s disease by nearly 50 percent
after 50 years, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. Currently
4.5 million Americans have Alzheimer’s, more than double the number
in 1980.
The
huperzine A study, said Schneider, is intended to show whether the
herb improves cognitive function in those already diagnosed with
Alzheimer’s. It will also show what dosage may be most effective,
and whether there are significant adverse effects. “Most of the
information we have so far is anecdotal—there just hasn’t been
well-designed clinical trials of this herb,” he noted.
Yet
huperzine A, which is available commercially in health food stores
and on web sites, is already being used by some doctors and patients
to treat Alzheimer’s. The danger with that approach, said
Schneider, is that huperzine is not regulated by the Food and Drug
Administration with regard to purity and amount of substance because
it is an herb. “With most substances regulated as nutraceuticals or
diet supplements you never know what you’re getting.
It
can be a broad range of substances of differing quality. The trial
huperzine A is derived through a pharmaceutical-grade extraction
process so it’s more than ninety-nine and forty-four hundredths
percent pure, and so we know what dosages we’re giving.”
That
is important, he noted, because it is possible to overdose on drugs
that block acetylcholinesterase. “If someone added huperzine to
Aricept, for example, they risk nausea, vomiting, confusion, muscle
cramping, respiratory difficulties and even seizures,” he said.
What
makes huperzine more attractive than the current pharmacologic
treatments is that “it may be a bit different, it may have certain
benefits the current treatments do not,” said Schneider. Yet, he
cautioned, “We don’t have unrealistic expectations. This
cholinesterase inhibitor may have a more favorable side effect
profile, so it may make a difference. We have expectations that it
will help, but this is still in the very early stages.”
The
huperzine A trial is currently seeking participants who have not
found current medications effective or tolerable, are 55 years and
older with Alzheimer’s disease and are not taking other
cholinesterase inhibitors. For more information please call Shirley
Sian or Morella Menicucci at (323) 442-7600 or e-mail gsc@usc.edu.
Additional
information on this trial and on Alzheimer’s disease in general can
be found on the USC Geriatric Studies Center Alzheimer’s Disease
Research Center website at http://www.usc.edu/memory.
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