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						Old drug may help keep 
						Alzheimer's patients out of nursing homes 
			
   
            
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		[October 27, 2015] 
		By Ben Hirschler 
			
		LONDON (Reuters) - A cheap off-patent drug 
		that relieves some symptoms of Alzheimer's disease may also help keep 
		people at an advanced stage of the illness out of nursing homes, at 
		least for a while. 
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			 Research published on Tuesday showed that withdrawing the commonly 
			used drug donepezil in moderate-to-severe patients doubled their 
			risk of moving into nursing care within a year, although it made no 
			difference during the following three years. 
			 
			Donepezil, originally sold by Eisai and Pfizer as Aricept and now 
			available generically for just over 20 pounds ($30) a year, works by 
			raising the levels of chemicals within the brain that allow nerve 
			cells to communicate. 
			 
			Like other existing Alzheimer's treatments, it cannot slow the 
			disease process itself. 
			 
			It is currently only approved for mild-to-moderate disease, so 
			patients often stop taking it when they deteriorate. But Robert 
			Howard of University College London, who led a publicly funded study 
			of the drug, said it was time to reconsider this. 
			
			  
			  
			"People will look at our trial and it will make them think that 
			these drugs have more to offer in severe Alzheimer's disease than 
			perhaps was previously thought," he told reporters. 
			 
			The new study is important, he believes, because it shows how a drug 
			could change lives by keeping sufferers at home, thereby saving on 
			residential dementia care that costs more than 30,000 pounds a year. 
			 
			"We are all impatient for the advent of true disease-modifying drugs 
			that can slow or halt the Alzheimer's process, but donepezil is 
			available right now and at modest cost," Howard said. 
			
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			The new findings, published in the journal Lancet Neurology, are a 
			follow-up of trial data after donepezil modestly improved cognitive 
			scores in advanced Alzheimer's patients in 2012. Because it was a 
			secondary analysis, other experts said the results should be viewed 
			as exploratory. 
			 
			Drug companies including Eli Lilly, Biogen and Roche are working to 
			develop true disease-modifying drugs for the memory-robbing disease, 
			although progress is proving slow. 
			 
			($1 = 0.6522 pounds) 
			 
			(Editing by Adrian Croft) 
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