JAMA study announces positive results
in Alzheimer disease with Ginkgo extract
October
22, 1997. Results of a multicenter study published in the most
recent issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA)
indicate that Ginkgo biloba extract can be of significant benefit
in the treatment of dementia associated with Alzheimer disease and
multi-infarct dementia (LeBars PL, Katz MM, Berman N, et al. A
placebo-controlled, double-blind, randomized trial of an extract of
Ginkgo biloba for dementia. JAMA 1997;278:1327-1332.). The
authors asserted that the improvement seen in patients with Alzheimer
could be equated with "a six-month delay in the progression of the
disease." These results are particularly promising in light of the fact
that no satisfactory treatments currently exist for the management of this
common and devastating condition.
The placebo-controlled,
double-blind study was designed to investigate the effects of standardized
Ginkgo extract in 309 patients with mild-to-severe dementia associated
with either Alzheimer disease or multi-infarct dementia. Patients were
randomized to receive 52 weeks of treatment with placebo or Ginkgo extract
at a dose of 40 mg three times a day, a total daily dose of 120 mg. At 52
weeks, 202 patients were included in the endpoint analysis, which was
based on standard tests of cognitive impairment, daily living and social
behavior, and general psychopathology.
The researchers reported that
27% of patients who received 26 or more weeks of treatment with Ginkgo
extract experienced at least a four-point improvement on the 70-point
Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive subscale (ADAS-Cog), compared
to 14% in the placebo group. Daily living and social behavior were deemed
improved in 37% of Ginkgo patients, compared to 23% of those taking
placebo, as measured by the Geriatric Evaluation by Relative's Rating
Instrument (GERRI). In contrast, the GERRI showed that 40% of patients
taking placebo experienced a worsening of their condition, while worsening
was seen in only 19% of those taking Ginkgo.
The authors concluded that "EGb
appears to stabilize and, in an additional 20 percent of cases (vs.
placebo), improves the patient's functioning for periods of six months to
one year. Regarding its safety, adverse events associated with EGb were no
different from those associated with placebo."
The Ginkgo preparation used in
the study (EGb 761) is a concentrated leaf extract standardized to 24%
ginkgo flavone glycosides and 6% terpenelactones, the same extract widely
used in Europe for the treatment of cognitive disorders and other
conditions. This extract, manufactured by Murdock Madaus Schwabe, Inc. in
Germany, is currently available in the United States under the trade names
Ginkgold? (from Nature's Way Products, Inc.) and Ginkoba? (from Pharmaton
Natural Health Products), and an improved formula with added
Gotu Kola is available as Ginkgo/Gotu
Kola Concentrate from Nature's Sunshine Products.
Similar encouraging results with
Ginkgo were recently reported in the journal Phytomedicine
(Kanowski S, Herrmann WM, Stephan K, et al. Proof of efficacy of the
Ginkgo biloba special extract EGb 761 in outpatients suffering from mild
to moderate primary degenerative dementia of the Alzheimer type or
multi-infarct dementia. Phytomed 1997;4(1):3-13.). This
double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized study investigated the
effects of Ginkgo extract in 156 patients with either Alzheimer disease or
multi-infarct dementia. A responder rate of 28% for multiple therapeutic
effects (p<0.01) was observed in patients taking Ginkgo extract, as
compared to 10% in the placebo group. A separate analysis of the two
different diagnostic subgroups (Alzheimer or multi-infarct dementia)
showed that the differences in improvements between Ginkgo and placebo
after 24 weeks were consistently slightly higher in patients with
Alzheimer disease. The researchers reported that the Ginkgo extract was
well tolerated.
The JAMA study can be
accessed at the journal's website at www.ama-assn.org or go directly to
www.ama-assn.org/sci-pubs/sci-news/1997/pres_rel.htm.
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