Jaque wrote:...By Gina Kolata Jan. 11, 2021, 11:10 a.m. ET (C) New York Times...
In a small clinical trial, an experimental Alzheimer’s drug slowed the rate at which patients lost the ability to think and care for themselves, the drug maker Eli Lilly announced on Monday....
The findings have not been published in any form, and not been widely reviewed by other researchers. ...
The drug, donanemab, a monoclonal antibody, binds to a small part of the hard plaques in the brain made of a protein, amyloid, that are hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease. ...
Participants who received the drug had a 32 percent deceleration in the rate of decline, compared with those who got a placebo. In six to 12 months, plaques were gone and stayed gone, ...
The small study needs to be replicated, ...
He has been hoping for 25 years for definitive evidence that the amyloid hypothesis is correct.
“This is what we’ve been waiting for,” Dr. Skovronsky said.
Thanks for posting about donanemab, Jacque! This is a drug we can expect to hear about in the next few years. But given that this is a Phase 2 trial, it's not yet close to submission to the FDA or other countries' regulatory bodies, I would guess. A Phase 2 clinical trial of a drug is primarily to test safety and efficacy (does it work as expected) in a larger group of patients than the Phase I trial.TheresaB wrote:Jaque wrote:...By Gina Kolata Jan. 11, 2021, 11:10 a.m. ET (C) New York Times...
In a small clinical trial, an experimental Alzheimer’s drug slowed the rate at which patients lost the ability to think and care for themselves, the drug maker Eli Lilly announced on Monday....
The findings have not been published in any form, and not been widely reviewed by other researchers. ...
The drug, donanemab, a monoclonal antibody, binds to a small part of the hard plaques in the brain made of a protein, amyloid, that are hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease. ...
Participants who received the drug had a 32 percent deceleration in the rate of decline, compared with those who got a placebo. In six to 12 months, plaques were gone and stayed gone, ...
The small study needs to be replicated, ...
Very interesting, more to come! Thank you.
In December 2017, Lilly began TRAILBLAZER-ALZ... It aimed to enroll 375 participants whose memory had been worsening for at least six months, who met a cutoff on the CogState Brief Battery, and who had a positive flortaucipir PET scan [i.e. positive amyloid in the brain]... Within this range, people have detectable cognitive decline over one to two years, but are not yet at advanced disease stages...
The primary outcome [i.e. measured goal] is change on the Integrated Alzheimer's Disease Rating Scale (iADRS), a combined cognitive/functional measure for early stage AD developed by Lilly.... Secondary measures include the ADAS-Cog13, CDR-Sum of Boxes, MMSE, ADCS-iADL, as well as amyloid and tau PET and volumetric MRI... evaluation of donanemab remains ongoing, with a revised enrollment estimate of 266 participants.
In January 2021, Lilly announced by press release that TRAILBLAZER-ALZ met its primary endpoint, with donanemab slowing decline on the iADRS by 32 percent compared to placebo at 18 months (news link TK). The company claimed improvement on all secondary endpoints of cognition and function, although not all were statistically significant. Treatment resulted in an average reduction in amyloid plaque by 84 centiloids, from 108 at baseline. Safety was similar to earlier trials. ARIA-E developed in 27 percent of treated patients, with six percent becoming symptomatic....
In October 2020, Lilly began recruiting for TRAILBLAZER-ALZ 2, a Phase 2 safety and efficacy trial in 500 people with early Alzheimer’s. Inclusion criteria are similar to TRAILBLAZER-ALZ, i.e., participants must have had a progressive and gradual memory decline for at least six months, MMSE scores between 20 and 28, and meet criteria on amyloid and tau PET scans. Participants will receive donanemab or placebo, with the primary outcome being change in CDR-Sum of Boxes after 18 months. Secondary measures include the MMSE, ADAS-Cog13, iADRS, and ADCS-iADL, amyloid and tau PET, and volumetric MRI, plus pharmacokinetics and measures of anti-donanemab antibodies. The trial is set to run through early 2024 at 87 sites in the United States, Canada, Japan, The Netherlands, and Poland.
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