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Thursday, November 3, 2016

Alzheimer's treatment hopes raised after drug that prevents toxic proteins from growing in brain enters final trials

November 3, 2016   Ian Johnston Science Correspondent


Researchers say the next few years will determine whether they have found the first 'much-needed treatment' for the disease


A new drug that can virtually prevent the production of sticky, toxic proteins found in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s has entered the final stage of clinical trials, raising hopes that it could provide the first effective treatment of the disease.
Researchers reported that the drug was a “potent inhibitor” of production of amyloid plaques, as the tangle of proteins are known, and also appeared to have only “relatively benign” side-effects.
They now plan to test various doses of the drug, called verubecestat, on about 1,500 people with mild cognitive impairment caused by Alzheimer’s over two years.
This, they said, should finally settle the debate about whether amyloid plaques cause the disease or are merely a symptom of it
In August, scientists reported they had developed a different drug that could clear amyloid plaques from the brains of Alzheimer’s patients, prompting one expert to suggest it could be a “game-changer” for treatment of the disease if it passed the last set of clinical trials.
But, commenting on that study, Professor Gordon Wilcock, of Oxford University, cautioned other anti-amyloid drugs had “failed to deliver” at the final hurdle.
Writing in the journal Science Translational Medicine, the researchers behind the verubecestat study said the drug “proved to be a potent and effective inhibitor of … production [of different kinds of amyloid plaques] in both rats and monkeys, achieving greater than 90 per cent reduction”. 
And they added: “The potency and maximal effect … were similar in humans and
animals.”
The drug also seemed to be reasonably safe to take compared to others designed to clear amyloid plaques.
The brains of Alzheimer's patients, showing how different doses of the drug reduced the number of amyloid plaques, in red, over a year Sevigny et al
“Many previously studied anti-amyloid mechanisms … are associated with serious side effects that limit the dose that can be administered to humans,” the researchers said.
“Thus, the relatively benign preclinical and clinical safety profile of verubecestat is noteworthy.”

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