Repurposed Multiple Sclerosis Drug May Improve Memory

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Summary: Fampridine, used for improving walking in multiple sclerosis, may also enhance working memory in individuals with schizophrenia or depression. A study found that the drug significantly improved working memory in participants with initially poor performance, but had no effect on those with strong baseline memory.

Fampridine increases brain excitability, enabling faster stimulus processing, making it a potential treatment for conditions involving cognitive impairments. Researchers plan further studies to explore its efficacy in mental health disorders.

Key Facts:

  • Fampridine improves working memory only in individuals with poor baseline performance.
  • The drug enhances brain excitability, facilitating faster processing of stimuli.
  • Researchers are planning trials to test its effectiveness in schizophrenia and depression.

Source: University of Basel

Fampridine is currently used to improve walking ability in multiple sclerosis. A new study shows that it could also help individuals with reduced working memory, as seen in mental health conditions like schizophrenia or depression.

Remembering a code for long enough to type it in; holding a conversation and reacting appropriately to what is being said: in everyday situations like these, we use our working memory.

This shows a brain.
The researchers also observed that fampridine increased brain excitability in all participants, thus enabling faster processing of stimuli. Credit: Neuroscience News

It allows a memory to be actively retained for a few seconds. Certain conditions, such as schizophrenia or depression, as well as ADHD, impair working memory. Those affected lose track in conversations and struggle to organize their thoughts.

Fampridine is a drug that could help in such cases, as researchers led by Professor Andreas Papassotiropoulos and Professor Dominique de Quervain at the University of Basel have shown.

The team has reported their findings in the journal Molecular Psychiatry.

Effective only if working memory is poor

In their study, the researchers tested the effectiveness of fampridine on working memory in 43 healthy adults. It was in those participants whose baseline working memory was at a low level that fampridine showed a more pronounced effect: after taking the active substance for three days, they scored better in the relevant tests than those who took the placebo. In contrast, in people who already had good baseline working memory, the drug showed no effect.

The researchers also observed that fampridine increased brain excitability in all participants, thus enabling faster processing of stimuli. The study was randomized and double-blind.

Established drug, new application

“Fampridine doesn’t improve working memory in everyone. But it could be a treatment option for those with reduced working memory,” explains Andreas Papassotiropoulos.

Dominique de Quervain adds: “That’s why, together with researchers from the University Psychiatric Clinics Basel (UPK), we’re planning studies to test the efficacy of fampridine in schizophrenia and depression.”

The drug is currently used to improve walking ability in multiple sclerosis (MS). Particularly in capsule form, which releases the active ingredient slowly in the body, fampridine has shown effects on cognitive performance in MS patients: for some, it alleviates the mental fatigue that can accompany MS.

The researchers did not select the drug at random: this study followed comprehensive analyses of genome data in order to find starting points for repurposing established drugs.

Fampridine acts on specific ion channels in nerve cells that, according to the researchers’ analyses, also play a role in mental disorders such as schizophrenia.

About this memory and neuropharmacology research news

Author: Angelika Jacobs
Source: University of Basel
Contact: Angelika Jacobs – University of Basel
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access.
“The effect of fampridine on working memory: A randomized controlled trial based on a genome-guided repurposing approach” by Andreas Papassotiropoulos et al. Molecular Psychiatry


Abstract

The effect of fampridine on working memory: A randomized controlled trial based on a genome-guided repurposing approach

Working memory (WM), a key component of cognitive functions, is often impaired in psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia. Through a genome-guided drug repurposing approach, we identified fampridine, a potassium channel blocker used to improve walking in multiple sclerosis, as a candidate for modulating WM.

In a subsequent double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover trial in 43 healthy young adults (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04652557), we assessed fampridine’s impact on WM (3-back d-prime, primary outcome) after 3.5 days of repeated administration (10 mg twice daily). Independently of baseline cognitive performance, no significant main effect was observed (Wilcoxon P = 0.87, r = 0.026).

However, lower baseline performance was associated with higher working memory performance after repeated intake of fampridine compared to placebo (rs = −0.37, P = 0.014, n = 43).

Additionally, repeated intake of fampridine lowered resting motor threshold (F(1,37) = 5.31, P = 0.027, R2β = 0.01), the non-behavioral secondary outcome, indicating increased cortical excitability linked to cognitive function.

Fampridine’s capacity to enhance WM in low-performing individuals and to increase brain excitability points to its potential value for treating WM deficits.

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