No evidence found for effect of
Ginkgo biloba on global cognitive change or specific cognitive domains
Older adults who used the herbal supplement Ginkgo biloba
for several years did not have a slower rate of cognitive decline compared to
adults who received placebo, according to a study in the December 23/30 issue
of JAMA.
"Ginkgo biloba is marketed widely and used with the hope
of improving, preventing, or delaying cognitive impairment associated with aging
and neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer disease," the authors write.
"Indeed, in the United States and particularly in Europe, Ginko biloba is perhaps
the most widely used herbal treatment consumed specifically to prevent age-related
cognitive decline." However, evidence from large clinical trials regarding its
effect on long-term cognitive functioning is lacking.
Beth E. Snitz, Ph.D., of the University of Pittsburgh,
and colleagues analyzed outcomes from the Ginkgo Evaluation of Memory (GEM) study
to determine if Ginko biloba slowed the rate of cognitive decline in older adults
who had normal cognition or mild cognitive impairment (MCI) at the beginning of
the study. The GEM study previously found that Ginko biloba was not effective
in reducing the incidence of Alzheimer dementia or dementia overall. The randomized,
double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial included 3,069 community-dwelling
participants, ages 72 to 96 years, who received a twice-daily dose of 120-mg extract
of Ginko biloba (n = 1,545) or identical-appearing placebo (n = 1,524). The study
was conducted at six academic medical centers in the United States between 2000
and 2008, with a median (midpoint) follow-up of 6.1 years. Change in cognition
was assessed by various tests and measures.
In this study, the largest randomized controlled trial
of Ginko biloba to report on outcomes to date, the researchers found no evidence
for an effect of Ginko biloba on global cognitive change and no evidence of effect
on specific cognitive domains of memory, language, attention, visuospatial abilities
and executive functions. They also found no evidence for differences in treatment
effects by age, sex, race, education or baseline cognitive status (MCI vs. normal
cognition).
"In sum, we find no evidence that Ginko biloba slows
the rate of cognitive decline in older adults. These findings are consistent with
previous smaller studies examining prevention of decline and facilitation of cognitive
performance and with the 2009 Cochrane review of Ginko biloba for dementia and
cognitive impairment."
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