This review was performed because the efficacy and effectiveness of Ginkgo biloba in dementia treatment has been an issue of controversy against a background of an increasing individual and societal burden due to these disorders, and given only moderate effects of cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine [
38,
39]. With only symptomatic treatments available, the clinical relevance of all anti-dementia drugs would be to improve cognitive and neuropsychological symptoms and activities of daily living and/or to delay deterioration.
We found a statistically significant advantage of Ginkgo biloba compared to placebo in improving cognition for the whole group of patients with Alzheimer's disease, vascular or mixed dementia. Regarding activities of daily living, there was no significant difference for the whole dementia group. However, in the subgroup of patients with Alzheimer's disease, the advantage of Ginkgo biloba compared to placebo was statistically significant. The benefit of Ginkgo biloba in overall response rates was quite robust when all response definitions of the studies were accepted. However, the available response definitions differed considerably. Therefore, we did not pool the results.
There was no consistent evidence of a benefit of Ginkgo biloba in the treatment of neuropsychiatric symptoms. However, the presence of psychological or behavioral symptoms in dementia may be an effect modifier. Two studies that included patients with neuropsychiatric features yielded a clinically relevant effect in this outcome domain. Based on our results, no solid conclusions can be given for quality of life. Subgroup analyses showed that a dosage of 240 mg of ginkgo might be necessary to yield clinically relevant effects.
According to the evaluated studies, Ginkgo biloba extract seems to be well tolerated with rates of adverse effects and study withdrawals not being different between medication and placebo. Nevertheless, it has to be taken into account that randomized controlled trials are not suitable to evaluate rare events and medication interactions. The included studies were undertaken with the standardized extract EGb 761
®. However, other ginkgo extracts and ginkgo-containing products may be associated with different side effects. During intake of EGb 761
®, mild gastro-intestinal symptoms, headache, dizziness or allergic skin reactions have occasionally been reported. Single cases of bleeding, e.g. intracranial haemorrhage, have been reported in the context of an intake of Ginkgo biloba preparations. However, some of these products concerned were of unknown origin and quality, some were multi-ingredient products, and in most instances anti-platelet agents or anticoagulants were taken in addition. A review of controlled studies indicated that the ginkgo extract EGb 761
® does neither influence blood clotting nor bleeding time nor significantly potentiates the effects of anticoagulant or anti-platelet drugs [
40]. In addition, a systematic review of case reports concluded that the clinical evidence for Ginkgo biloba causing bleeding is far from compelling [
41,
42].
We included efficacy as well as effectiveness studies in a variety of settings and regions where different additional psychosocial treatments were offered. In addition, in recent years the availability of cholinesterase inhibitors and memory clinics may have influenced the way dementia is seen and treated. With cholinesterase inhibitors being established treatments, it has become more difficult to run placebo- or actively controlled ginkgo trials in Western countries. The larger effect sizes in the Eastern European studies [[
32], Ihl R, Bachinskaya N, Korczyn AD, Tribanek M, Hoerr R, Napryeyenko O: Efficacy and Safety of a Once-Daily Formulation of Ginkgo biloba Extract EGb 761
® in Dementia with Neuropsychiatric Features. A Randomized Controlled Trial, submitted] may indicate a higher differential efficacy of Ginkgo biloba compared to placebo in a setting with less specialized dementia care and less availability or reimbursement of anti-dementia drugs. These two studies were the ones with the highest effect sizes for cognition and activities of daily living outcomes and had extremely low drop-out rates. Therefore, the higher effect sizes in these studies might be a consequence of lower drop-out rates and less influence of statistical assumptions necessary to calculate last-observation-carried-forward analyses. In addition, treatment can only work optimally in compliant patients staying in the study for the whole follow-up period. When more people drop out of the treatment arm, this would lead to an underestimation of the effect size of the intervention.
In a situation where the clinical significance of the effects of anti-dementia drugs is increasingly questioned, and neither empirical data nor a consensus on minimally clinically important differences in outcome parameters is available [
43], it is difficult to assess if the moderate effects of ginkgo on cognition and ADLs make a difference for the patients in the long run. The validity and reliability of clinical endpoints remain unclear with some early trials using outcomes that would not be accepted for modern studies. Furthermore, there was only one study with a 52-week-follow-up which showed a small but statistically significant advantage in cognition and daily activities. The effects did not differ in magnitude from the 26-week results. On the other hand, even a short follow-up time of 12 weeks was sufficient to separate ginkgo from placebo in one study [
31]. This indicates that the duration of the study and the setting as well as methodological factors may be stronger outcome modifiers than the effects of the medication itself.
With Ginkgo biloba being prescribed for a variety of indications, external validity and generalisability of study results to the target population is of utmost importance. Using criteria for external validity assessment as proposed by Bornhöft et al. [
44], we realized that none of the studies considered all those criteria. Some studies focused on the efficacy of ginkgo and tried to assure high internal validity with low selection, performance, detection and attrition bias [[
33], Ihl R, Bachinskaya N, Korczyn AD, Tribanek M, Hoerr R, Napryeyenko O: Efficacy and Safety of a Once-Daily Formulation of Ginkgo biloba Extract EGb 761
® in Dementia with Neuropsychiatric Features. A Randomized Controlled Trial, submitted]. In these studies, patients with somatic or psychiatric comorbidity were excluded, and other medications were not allowed. This may limit the generalisability of the study results, although in most of the studies included in this review, the setting reflected the everyday conditions with most patients being treated by outpatient clinics or practice-based physicians. One study was performed only with persons living at old people's homes in the Netherlands and had an over-representation of the very old [
34,
45]. This may have contributed to the lack of ginkgo effectiveness versus placebo. Other studies were community-based pragmatic randomized trials with substantial clinical relevance. For example, in the McCarney et al. study [
2], patients were included by general practitioners. The very pragmatic design, together with insufficient statistical power, however, may limit internal validity as many of the included patients were treated concurrently with cholinesterase inhibitors, which were allowed to be continued in both study arms. This may have led to a ceiling effect and the dilution of a significant effect [
5]. A high external validity may therefore compromise internal validity, particularly in those cases where study designs reflect everyday conditions but fail to control other influences on the outcomes. As Bornhöft et al. note [
46], in most ginkgo studies external validity has not sufficiently been addressed. With evidence of a considerable influence of contextual factors also in dementia treatment, it is probable that trial participation itself improves outcomes [
47] and modifies the effects of medication. Therefore, it seems important to keep study conditions as close to the clinical reality.
Our results are consistent with the Cochrane data indicating a small advantage for ginkgo compared with placebo at 12 and 24 weeks in dementia [
7]. However, we did not include trials where patients did not receive a validated dementia diagnosis. Due to our inclusion criteria, the overall methodological quality of studies was higher than in the Cochrane Review, which included some older studies without validated dementia diagnoses, less rigorous randomization and allocation schemes and, consequently, a higher risk of bias. In addition, we identified and included three recently performed trials. Two of these trials showed a considerable superiority of ginkgo in mild to moderate dementia. This may have contributed to the differences between ours and previous reviews. Contrary to previous reviews, we pooled the values of different outcomes scales of the same domain for meta-analysis (e.g. ADAS-cog and SKT for cognition). Given the paucity of studies using the same outcome scales, we felt that this was justified in order to increase the power of the meta-analysis.
Although there is some evidence of a Ginkgo biloba mode of action through mitochondrial stabilization and improvement of cerebral energy mechanism [
48,
49] in addition to hemodynamic effects, there is no consistent picture how this substance may alleviate dementia symptoms. However, this is also true for cholinesterase inhibitors.
Despite a considerable heterogeneity not fully explained by dementia type or ginkgo dosage, we think that ginkgo may be of benefit for a certain but unknown proportion of dementia patients. Against this background and in analogy with dementia prevention [
3,
50], it may be advisable to run a major multicenter study for dementia treatment to definitively answer the question of ginkgo effectiveness for different dementia subgroups in advanced health care systems. Treatment and setting should reflect everyday conditions as much as possible without compromising internal validity. We think that the hitherto gained results justify both symptomatic treatment of dementia and further research, as differential effects for Alzheimer's and vascular dementia are obvious and ginkgo is carried on being used as a complementary therapy in these disorders.