Nighttime Agitation and Restless Legs Syndrome in People with Alzheimer's Disease

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $751,794 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary/Abstract. Nighttime agitation, defined as the appearance or exacerbation of behavioral disturbances, such as wandering and aggression, in the afternoon and/or evening, is a prevalent symptom in persons with Alzheimer’s disease that reduces their quality of life and restricts their environments. Effective treatments are lacking. One major cause for past failure of treatments has been the approach of treating all nighttime agitation alike. Unlike interventions in the past, our precision medicine approach tailors the intervention to a specific sleep disorder, restless legs syndrome (RLS). RLS occurs in 10-14% of older adults and it is likely that persons with Alzheimer’s disease have RLS, since it is quite common, but it is infrequently identified because diagnosis is dependent on patients answering complex questions about their symptoms. RLS causes an urge to move associated with uncomfortable and unpleasant leg sensations. The urge to move and leg discomfort only occur or worsen at night, and relief is by movement. We hypothesized that RLS might be an etiology for nighttime agitation because: 1) circadian patterns of nighttime agitation and RLS symptoms are almost identical; 2) unrelieved RLS discomfort may precipitate behaviors such as screaming and requests for help, and the urge to move may cause wandering, pacing, and restlessness; and 3) factors common in institutionalized persons with Alzheimer’s disease, such as anemia, prolonged bed rest, and antidepressants, trigger or worsen RLS. Our preliminary work supports our hypothesis, and provides beginning evidence that RLS may be an unidentified etiology for nighttime agitation. In 59 persons with dementia and nighttime agitation, and RLS diagnosed using objective measures, we found that almost ¼ had RLS and that RLS was associated with nighttime agitation (r = 0.31, p .01). We now propose a pilot clinical trial to determine if RLS treatment reduces nighttime agitation, improves sleep, reduces antipsychotic medications, and the mechanism for these effects. We have chosen gabapentin enacarbil (GEn) as the treatment because it is FDA approved for RLS and has a favorable safety profile. We propose an 8-week, double-blind placebo-controlled randomized pilot trial of GEn versus placebo in 136 nursing home residents with moderate to severe Alzheimer’s disease, nighttime agitation, and RLS, followed by an 8-week post-trial evaluation of antipsychotic medication use. The specific aims are to: 1) Determine the effect of GEn, compared to placebo on nighttime agitation (primary endpoint); 2) Describe the safety profile of GEn compared to placebo in this population; 3) Estimate the effect size of GEn compared to placebo on nighttime sleep, RLS behaviors, and antipsychotic medications; 4) Explore whether frequency of RLS behaviors mediates the effect of GEn on nighttime agitation behaviors. The results of this study and future definitive trials may shift and improve standards of care for trea...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9886167
Project number
5R01AG051588-06
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN
Principal Investigator
Kathy Culpepper Richards
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$751,794
Award type
5
Project period
2018-05-01 → 2023-03-31