BREAKING NEWS: A Promising Advance in Alzheimer’s Treatment

July 26, 2018

On Wednesday, the search for a drug to treat Alzheimer’s reached a hopeful crossroads. For the first time in a large clinical trial, a new drug both reduced plaques in brains of sufferers with Alzheimer’s and slowed the progression of dementia. 

These results were presented on Wednesday at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in Chicago. More trials are needed if the drug is to be considered truly effective, but for the first time there is hope on the horizon for the 44 million people worldwide suffering from Alzheimer’s.

In an article published by The New York TimesDr. Reisa Sperling, director of the Center for Alzheimer Research and Treatment at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, who was not involved in the study said,This trial shows you can both clear plaque and change cognition. I don’t know that we’ve hit a home run yet. It’s important not to over-conclude on the data. But as a proof of concept, I feel like this is very promising.”

As reported in The Times, the trial involved 856 patients from the U.S., Europe and Japan who showed early symptoms of cognitive decline. They received a diagnosis of either mild cognitive impairment or mild Alzheimer’s dementia, and all had brain scans revealing significant accumulations of the amyloid protein that clumps into plaques in people with the disease, reported Dr. Lynn Kramer, chief medical officer of Eisai, a Japan-based company that developed the drug, known as BAN2401, along with Biogen, based in Cambridge, Mass.

There have been other drugs that have been able to reduce amyloid levels but they didn’t alleviate memory decline or other cognitive deficits. The data presented on Wednesday revealed that the highest of the five doses of the new drug — an injection every two weeks of 10 milligrams per kilogram of a patient’s weight — reduced amyloid levels and slowed cognitive decline when compared to patients who received placebo.

Out of the 856 patients involved in the study, 161 patients in the group took the highest dose. Eighty-one percent of these patients showed such significant drops in amyloid levels that they “converted from amyloid positive to amyloid negative,” Dr. Kramer said in an interview. Translated, this means that patients’ amyloid levels dropped from being high enough to be considered  dementia to a level below the dementia threshold.

Additionally, during a battery of cognitive and functional tests measuring memory and skills that involve planning and reasoning, the high-dose group’s performace declined at a rate that was 30 percent slower than the rate of decline in the placebo group.

In The Times interview, Dr. Sperling, who was an advisor to Eisai last year, called the reductions in amyloid “dramatic,” but said the cognitive results were less momentous. Still, she expressed, “If you could really slow decline by 30 percent for people who are still normal or very mildly impaired, that would be clinically important.”

More research and further tests are needed to determine if the drug has the capability to be effective long-term, but it’s definitely a move in the right direction.

Source:The New York Times

Other Articles

  • Breakthrough: Blood Test Makes it Possible to Track Alzheimer’s Advancement 
    A connection between Neurofilament light (NfL) levels present in the blood and Alzheimer’s disease was recently made in a study released by the JAMA Network.
  • New Study Might Diagnose CTE in Brains of the Living
    A recent study published in the New England Journal of medicine revealed that brain scans of more than two dozen former NFL players found that the men had abnormal levels of the protein linked to chronic traumatic encephalopathy (C.T.E.), the degenerative brain disease we have discussed here that’s associated with repeated hits to the head.  
  • JUST PUT DOWN THE SUPPLEMENTS 
    There have long been debates among established medical authorities and supplement manufacturers, especially when it comes to treating cognitive decline. Are the myriad of supplements currently on the market a genie in a bottle? Or is it better to focus on leading a healthy, balanced lifestyle? 
  • BREAKING NEWS: Promising Alzheimer’s Drug Fails in Late-Stage Human Trials 
    Another big blow came to the Alzheimer’s research community late last month when pharmaceutical company Biogen and Eisai Co. announced on March 22 that they would terminate two late-stage studies of
  • Could a Noninvasive Eye Exam Preemptively Diagnose Alzheimer’s Disease? 
    That’s what a recent study conducted at the Duke Eye Center suggests. The study of more than 200 people, published on March 11 in the journal Ophthalmology Retina, proposes that a quick, noninvasive
  • Tom Seaver Diagnosis Reignites Lyme Disease & Dementia Debate
    AN ARTICLE IN The New York Times recently revealed that Tom Seaver, legendary pitcher and the most prominent player in New York Mets history, is stepping back from public life because of advancing dementia. It was recently discovered that Seaver, 74, has dementia. However, for many years he suffered from the effects of Lyme disease, which can cause cognitive problems similar to dementia.