Therapeutic strategies in vascular cognitive impairment: A systematic review of population, intervention, comparators, and outcomes
Federico Masserini, Giacomo Baso, Claudia Gendarini, Leonardo Pantoni
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Vascular cognitive impairment (VCI) is a common and heterogeneous condition, clinically and pathophysiologically, that still lacks approved treatment. METHODS: We reviewed evidence from randomized and non-randomized clinical trials in VCI to explore whether any therapeutic option warrants further investigation and to assess possible flaws in previous studies. RESULTS: We identified 118 studies after searching PubMed and Embase, including 19,223 participants and 5 different VCI subtypes. We found 63 different types of intervention (51 pharmacologic, 5 employing physical agent application, 7 rehabilitation approaches) compared with either placebo, best medical treatment, or other interventions. Treatment efficacy was assessed through 125 outcome measures (with a clearly pre-specified primary outcome in 50.8% of studies). DISCUSSION: Therapeutic trials in VCI have been heterogeneous in terms of populations, types of interventions, and outcomes. Overall, a lack of clear pathophysiological rationale for tested interventions seems to emerge, together with the need to homogenize trial study design.