Abstract
Donepezil (donepezil hydrochloride, E-2020, Aricept™, Eisai), launched in March 1997, was the first drug to be marketed for the symptomatic treatment of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in the UK. It had been launched a year earlier in the US where clinicians had already had experience of tacrine (THA). Donepezil is a piperidine based, potent, specific, non-competitive and reversible inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase (AChE). It is structurally dissimilar from other established cholinesterase inhibitors, namely THA (an acridine compound) and the carbamates, physostigmine and rivastigmine and has a pharmacokinetic and tolerability profile distinct from these agents. Experimentally, donepezil inhibits AChE activity in human erythrocytes and increases extracellular acetylcholine levels in the cerebral cortex and the hippocampus of the rat. Pharmacologically, donepezil has a half-life of approximately 70 h lending itself to once daily administration. The most common adverse events reported in clinical trials have been...