Background: This study examines the joint effect on cognition of selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors
(SSRIs) and cholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) in depressed patients affected by Alzheimer’s disease (AD)
living at home.
Methods: The study was conducted in two different outpatient neurological clinics. 338 patients with probable
ADwere treated with ChEis (donepezil, rivastigmine and galantamine) as per the clinician’s judgment and were
observed for nine months. At study entry, participants underwent a multidimensional assessment evaluating
cognitive, functional and psychobehavioral domains. All patients were evaluated at baseline, after one (T1),
three (T2) and nine months (T3). Patients were grouped in three different categories (patients not depressed
and not treated with SSRIs, patients depressed and treated with SSRIs, and patients depressed but not treated
with SSRIs).
Results: At baseline 182 were diagnosed as not depressed and not treated with SSRIs, 66 as depressed and
treated with SSRIs, and 90 as depressed but not treated with SSRIs. The mean change in MMSE score
from baseline to nine months showed that depressed patients not treated worsened in comparison with those
not depressed and not treated with SSRIs (mean change −0.8±2.3 vs 0.04±2.9; p = 0.02) and patients
depressed and treated with SSRI (mean change −0.8±2.3 vs 0.1±2.5; p = 0.03).
Conclusions: In AD patients treated with AChEIs, SSRIs may exert some degree of protection against the
negative effects of depression on cognition