Published
4 years agoon
Two experimental drugs failed to prevent or slow mental decline in a study of people who are virtually destined to develop Alzheimer’s disease at a relatively young age because they inherited rare gene flaws.
The study tested solanezumab by Eli Lilly & Co., and gantenerumab by Swiss drugmaker Roche and its U.S. subsidiary, Genentech. Both drugs gave disappointing results in some earlier studies, but the doses in this one ranged up to four to five times higher and researchers had hoped that would prove more effective.
The study was funded by the U.S. National Institute on Aging, the Alzheimer’s Association and some foundations.
It involved about 200 people in the United States, Europe and elsewhere with flaws in one of three genes.
“If you get one of these genetic mutations you’re almost guaranteed to get Alzheimer’s,” typically in your 30s, 40s or 50s, said Dr. Eric McDade, another study leader at Washington University.
People like this account for only about 1% of Alzheimer’s cases, but their brain changes and symptoms are similar to those who develop the disease at a later age. That gives a unique chance to test potential treatments.
“We know everyone will get sick and we know about what time that is” in their lives, Bateman said.
Most study participants already had signs of the harmful protein in their brain even if they were showing no symptoms when the study started.
The were given either a gantenerumab shot, an IV of solanezumab or fake versions of these treatments every four weeks. The drugs made no difference in a combination score of four memory and thinking tests compared to placebo treatments.
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