UA-45667900-1

Friday, 4 October 2013

Nicotine Patches - Autism, Alzheimer's and MCI

Following on from my last, rather science-heavy post, in which I became convinced of the possible value of nicotine patches in autism, I found that in the field of Alzheimer’s, their therapeutic value has already been established.

Autism is indeed not Alzheimer’s, but studies on brain samples in both diseases  have shown the same diminished acetylcholine and nicotinic receptor activity.  Also, note that the two Alzheimer’s drugs Donepezil and Galantamine, that are acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, were successfully trialed in autism.  I had proposed that nicotine patches might do the same job and hopefully without the side effects.

Alzheimer’s research is well funded.  You will below how the research is very professional.

 
Paul Newhouse, Clinical Neuroscience Research Unit, Vanderbilt University

Dr Newhouse has already been looking at the effect of nicotine on Alzheimer’s and MCI (Mild Cognitive Impairment) for many years.  Only in 2012 though did he publish his phase 1 clinical trial of nicotine patches in non-smokers with MCI.
"The trial involved 67 non-smokers with MCI, which is considered an intermediate between normal aging and dementia. People with MCI are more likely to develop Alzheimers's disease. 
Half of the patients wore a skin patch that delivered 15 milligrams of nicotine per day; the other half wore a placebo patch. The study was double-blinded, meaning both the patients and the researchers were unaware who was getting the drug.
After six months, patients who wore the nicotine patch regained 46 percent of their age-adjusted "normal performance" on long-term memory tests, whereas patients in the placebo group worsened by 26 percent."
It looks like even he was surprised at just how good the results were.  The improvement was profound and the patches were well tolerated.  Later stage trials will now follow.

 
Here is the Abstract:- 

Objective: To preliminarily assess the safety and efficacy of transdermal nicotine therapy on cognitive performance and clinical status in subjects with mild cognitive impairment (MCI).
Methods: Nonsmoking subjects with amnestic MCI were randomized to transdermal nicotine (15 mg per day or placebo) for 6 months. Primary outcome variables were attentional improvement assessed with Connors Continuous Performance Test (CPT), clinical improvement as measured by clinical global impression, and safety measures. Secondary measures included computerized cognitive testing and patient and observer ratings.
Results: Of 74 subjects enrolled, 39 were randomized to nicotine and 35 to placebo. 67 subjects completed (34 nicotine, 33 placebo). The primary cognitive outcome measure (CPT) showed a significant nicotine-induced improvement. There was no statistically significant effect on clinician-rated global improvement. The secondary outcome measures showed significant nicotine-associated improvements in attention, memory, and psychomotor speed, and improvements were seen in patient/informant ratings of cognitive impairment. Safety and tolerability for transdermal nicotine were excellent.
Conclusion: This study demonstrated that transdermal nicotine can be safely administered to nonsmoking subjects with MCI over 6 months with improvement in primary and secondary cognitive measures of attention, memory, and mental processing, but not in ratings of clinician-rated global impression. We conclude that this initial study provides evidence for nicotine-induced cognitive improvement in subjects with MCI; however, whether these effects are clinically important will require larger studies.
Classification of evidence: This study provides Class I evidence that 6 months of transdermal nicotine (15 mg/day) improves cognitive test performance, but not clinical global impression of change, in nonsmoking subjects with amnestic MCI.

 
Here is a lengthy Power Point presentation of his findings.

 
Conclusion
It is now clear that nicotine patches are effective in people with diminished acetylcholine and nicotinic receptor activity (which includes Alzheimer’s and Autism) and seem well tolerated by non-smokers.  As I pointed out in the last post, only a SMALL dose will work, a large dose will have the opposite effect. Dr Newhouse has actually tested this effect (see his presentation) and makes similar comments.  In the coming years, I am confident he will establish an excellent therapy for MCI and Alzheimer’s.  For Autism, I think it will remain a case of improvisation.  Note that in the trial they started with a low dose and built up to the 15mg patch over 21 days.  This dose was for adults.

Newhouse also suggests that nicotine may work better than the drug alternatives and might make a permanent (beneficial) change in subjects.  This was also suggested by other researchers in my previous post.
The patches can be cut like Sellotape/Scotch tape and they certainly do have an effect.  I know, because I am testing half a 15 mg patch right now.

Thursday, 3 October 2013

Biomarkers in Autism : The Cholinergic system – In need of caffeine & nicotine or maybe just choline

Strange as it may sound, but if you have ASD a strong cup of coffee and a cigarette may actually do you some good.  Following on from my earlier post about Serotonin, showing that LSD was seen as an effective therapy in the 1960s, you might be wondering where my blog is taking us.  I just follow the science, wherever it takes us.

First of all what is the Cholinergeric system.

Cholinergic system (a summary from Wikipedia)
Cholinergic typically refers to acetylcholine in the neurological sense.  The parasympathetic nervous system, which uses acetylcholine almost exclusively to send its messages, is said to be almost entirely cholinergic. Neuromuscular junctions, preganglionic neurons of the sympathetic nervous system, the basal forebrain, and brain stem complexes are also cholinergic

In neuroscience and related fields, the term cholinergic is used in the following related contexts:
  • A substance (or ligand) is cholinergic if it is capable of producing, altering, or releasing acetylcholine ("indirect-acting") or mimicking its behaviour at one or more of the body's acetylcholine receptor types ("direct-acting").
  • A receptor is cholinergic if it uses acetylcholine as its neurotransmitter.[2]
  • A synapse is cholinergic if it uses acetylcholine as its neurotransmitter.

Acetylcholine is one of many neurotransmitters in the autonomic nervous system (ANS). It acts on both the peripheral nervous system (PNS) and central nervous system (CNS) and is the only neurotransmitter used in the motor division of the somatic nervous system.

In the central nervous system, acetylcholine and the associated neurons form a neurotransmitter system, the cholinergic system, which tends to cause anti-excitatory actions.
Damage to the cholinergic (acetylcholine-producing) system in the brain has been shown to be plausibly associated with the memory deficits associated with Alzheimer's disease.

Synthesis and degradation


Acetylcholine is synthesized in certain neurons by the enzyme choline acetyltransferase from the compounds choline and acetyl-CoA. Cholinergic neurons are capable of producing Ach.

Receptors


There are two main classes of acetylcholine receptor (AChR), nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR) and muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChR). They are named for the ligands used to activate the receptors.

Nicotinic


Nicotinic AChRs are ionotropic receptors permeable to sodium, potassium, and calcium ions. They are stimulated by nicotine and acetylcholine. They are of two main types, muscle-type and neuronal-type. The former can be selectively blocked by curare and the latter by hexamethonium. The main location of nicotinic AChRs is on muscle end plates, on autonomic ganglia (both sympathetic and parasympathetic), and in the CNS.[32]

Muscarinic


Muscarinic receptors are metabotropic, and affect neurons over a longer time frame. They are stimulated by muscarine and acetylcholine, and blocked by atropine. Muscarinic receptors are found in both the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system, in heart, lungs, upper GI tract and sweat glands. Extracts from the plant Deadly night shade included this compound (atropine), and the blocking of the muscarinic AChRs increases pupil size as used for attractiveness in many European cultures in the past

--- end of wikipedia ---
 
The Research Showing Abnormality in ASD
The following study was carried out in the UK in 2002 on post mortem brain tissue from “Brain banks” in the US.  It is extensively referred to in the later research.




 






An earlier paper on the same subject:-



CONCLUSIONS: These neurochemical abnormalities implicate the cholinergic system in developmental disorders such as autism and suggest the potential for intervention based on cholinergic receptor modulation.

If the low level of cortical nicotinic receptors is consistently observed and clinically relevant, therapeutic strategies could include receptor agonists, such as nicotine, which has already been applied in Tourette’s disorder with amelioration of symptoms. Such treatment could also be disease modifying.
 

Other studies on autistic brain samples have shown diminished acetylcholine and nicotinic receptor activity.

Implications 10 years on remain the same
A recent study by neuroscientists at Ohio State University, concludes that neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) alterations are biomarkers for ASD and that specific nAChRs subtypes are likely to be useful therapeutic targets for the treatment of core deficits. They claim a case can be made for the use of  α7 nAChRs to reduce neuroinflammation in the brain in those ASD individuals with such clinical pathology. The ultimate hope is that these agents, when administered early in development, by their presumed ability to modulate a number of different neurotransmitter systems and associated signaling pathways, could help correct core deficits associated with ASD.

Interventions

Just by spending 5 minutes on Wikipedia, you can find logical interventions that could have been tested since 2002.  Some have indeed been tested, others have not.  Here below is a copy-paste from Wikipedia, with interesting drugs highlighted.

 

Reversibel acetylcholinesterase inhibitor (often abbreviated AChEI)


Compounds which function as reversible competitive or noncompetitive inhibitors of cholinesterase are those most likely to have therapeutic uses. These include:


Natural Compounds



ACh receptor agonists/antagonists


Acetylcholine receptor agonists and antagonists can either have an effect directly on the receptors or exert their effects indirectly, e.g., by affecting the enzyme acetylcholinesterase, which degrades the receptor ligand. Agonists increase the level of receptor activation, antagonists reduce it.

Drugs acting on the cholinergic system


Blocking, hindering or mimicking the action of acetylcholine has many uses in medicine. Drugs acting on the acetylcholine system are either agonists to the receptors, stimulating the system, or antagonists, inhibiting it.

ACh and its receptors
Drug
Nm
Nn
M1
M2
M3
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+/-
-
+
-
+
+
+
-
-
-
+
-
-
-

Direct acting


These are drugs that mimic acetylcholine on the receptor. In low doses, they stimulate the receptors, in high doses they numb them due to depolarisation block.



------- end of Wikipedia ---------
 
Evidence based approach
The web is full of commentators telling you to only pay attention to evidence-based treatments.  This sound great in principle, but it assumes there are copious amounts of well-constructed clinical trials.  Moreover, is assumes that there is just one type of autism, or that clinical trials are sophisticatedly constructed to test individual sub-types, one at a time (which they are not).

So, in reality, the evidence is generally poor quality and so applying a pure evidence-based approach will leave you exactly back where you started.
I have gathered together what I think is a remarkable amount of evidence from multiple imperfect trials and anecdotal case studies.


Use Of Donepzil
Following on two earlier trials, Chez et Al carried out a double-blind study  of Donepezil hydrochloride, an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor  to confirm those findings. 

 

 The trial concluded:-

Expressive and receptive speech gains, as well as decreases in severity of overall autistic behavior, were documented after 6-weeks for the treatment group. These improvements were statistically significant when compared to placebo, and were clinically meaningful as assessed over time. Donepezil hydrochloride appears to improve expressive and receptive language as well as overall autistic features, consistent with the hypothesis of acetylcholinergic enhancement

 Here is a more recent case study from India


A woman consulted psychiatric Out-Patient Department (OPD) for her 5-year and 2-month-old son presenting with typical autistic symptoms like social, behavioural, and communicational ineptitudeness. Subsequent treatment with Donepezil resulted in marked improvement in the aforementioned symptomatology. Recent studies in autistic child have shown diminished acetylcholine and nicotinic receptor activity, thus an acetylcholinergic enhancer, Donepezil, likely accounts for improvement in autistic symptoms. Evidently, the case report consolidates Donepezil role as a potentially useful agent in the treatment of cognitive and behavioural symptoms observed in this disorder.

 Mecamylamine
There was a recent trial of Mecamylamine, with mixed results, but the researcher is already planning a follow trial of a similar drug called varenicline, that was previously suggested by other researchers.

RESULTS:

Eighteen participants (10 mecamylamine, 8 placebo) completed the study. All doses were well tolerated; the only side effect of note was constipation (50% compared with 25% of placebo group). Three children had clinically nonsignificant electrocardiographic QT prolongation. Both groups showed modest to moderate improvement, but differences between groups were negligible. On the primary outcome measure, the Ohio Autism Clinical Impressions Scale, 90% of the active treatment group showed improvement at some point (but only 40% sustained it), compared with 62% on placebo. Of the four in active treatment that sustained improvement, three had a maximum dose of 0.13-0.15 mg/kg/day, while those who regressed had doses ≥0.18 mg/kg/day. Graphed means suggested better outcome with lower mg/kg and longer medication duration. Four parents spontaneously reported reduced hyperactivity and irritability and better verbalization and continued mecamylamine at their own expense.

CONCLUSION:

Mecamylamine appeared to be safe, but not very effective in autism. The suggestion of better results at lower doses and longer exposure warrants consideration for future trials. The next step would be exploration of a more specific α4β2 nAChR agonist, such as varenicline.

Varenicline is a drug developed to help people to stop smoking.  It is widely used and looks set to be trialed in autism


Galantamine
Galantamine was successfully trialed and I am surprised we do not hear more about it.  In fact, it was developed in the Soviet Union in the 1950s and is now used for Alzheimer's.  It is based on snowdrop flowers.  It is available as a drug and as a supplement, depending on where you live.

RESULTS:

Patients showed a significant reduction in parent-rated irritability and social withdrawal on the ABC as well as significant improvements in emotional lability and inattention on the Conners' Parent Rating Scale--Revised. Similarly, clinician ratings showed reductions in the anger subscale of the Children's Psychiatric Rating Scale. Eight of 13 participants were rated as responders on the basis of their improvement scores on the Clinical Global Impressions scale. Overall, galantamine was well-tolerated, with no significant adverse effects apart from headaches in one patient.

CONCLUSION:

In this open trial, galantamine was well-tolerated and appeared to be beneficial for the treatment of interfering behaviors in children with autism, particularly aggression, behavioral dyscontrol, and inattention. Further controlled trials are warranted


The missing evidence
You will have noticed caffeine and nicotine in the title of this post.  You may have noted that back in 2001/2 the original researchers suggested the logical next step was to trial nicotine patches.

All I can find is one case report in ADHD, which to me is just ASD-lite.


If you look in internet forums you will see that DAN doctors in the US are using nicotine patches.  You will also find people giving small doses of caffeine.
Having reviewed “the evidence” I think it is entirely logical to trial SMALL doses of nicotine and caffeine.  The research indeed tells us that only SMALL does may have the desired effect.
One report I read was a DAN Doctor giving her own child a quarter of 7mg nicotine patch.  By my research, that equals the nicotine of a single cigarette.
You will also see older kids with HFA (high functioning autism) writing on the web how they feel it easier to (pretend to) be more NT (neuro-typical) after drinking coffee and/or smoking. (Maybe they just look more NT, or maybe there is some truth in it).  They do not talk about alcohol.
The other “obvious” thing that has not been trialed is acetylcholine or choline itself.  It is known to be deficient in autism.  It is sometimes included in multivitamin pills in small amounts. Choline is widely available as a supplement.  It is also used for its nootropic properties and there are claims it reduces neuroinflammation.  It is used in depression, memory loss, Alzheimer’s and schizophrenia  It also lower cholesterol. Most surprisingly, choline is prescribed to control asthma, a comorbidity of ASD.  
Choline is used by people trying to boost their brainpower by combining it with other nootropic drugs.  Their favourite drug appear to be Piracetam, which is the same drug used for ASD in Ukraine and subject of a clinical trial in Iran, that I wrote about recently.

It is remarkable how many drugs I am writing about are either (ab)used by body builders or now IQ builders.

Conclusion
This post has really surprised me.  Firstly, there more drugs that look like they actually do work in autism (Donepezil and Galantamine).  There is an interesting phase 4 trial underway using Donepzil + Choline. Phase 4 is the final phase.

Nicotine may set alarm bells ringing, but if you check it out, you will see that very small amounts are apparently harmless.  Thanks to smokers, there exists a perfect transdermal delivery system.  Just why nobody trials it in autism (Glaxo produce Nicorette patches) is inexplicable.
Small amounts of coffee are given to even young children in many strong coffee drinking countries (like the Balkans). Coca Cola and even Ice Tea are caffeine-rich.

Choline is probably the simplest, cheapest and safest intervention;  but that does not mean it is will be effective.  Nobody has made a controlled trial with it, probably because there is no money in it.
For a change in my posts, it looks like there is something for everyone.