A drug that destroys the
characteristic protein plaques that build up in the brains of patients
with Alzheimer's is showing "tantalising" promise, scientists say.
Experts are cautious because the drug, Aducanumab, is still in the early stages of development.
But
a study in Nature has shown it is safe and hinted that it halts memory decline.
Larger studies are now under way to fully evaluate the drug's effects.
The build-up of amyloid in the brain has been a treatment target for many years.
Dropped out
This study, of 165 patients, was designed to test Aducanumab was safe to take.
After a year of treatment, it also showed the higher the dose the stronger the effect on amyloid plaques.
The researchers then carried out tests on memory and found "positive effects".
However,
40 people dropped out of the study, half because of side effects they
experienced, such as headaches. These too were much more common with a
higher dosage.
The next phase of research - phase 3 - involves two
separate studies. These are recruiting 2,700 patients with very early
stage Alzheimer's across North America, Europe and Asia in order to
fully test the drug's effect on cognitive decline.
Brain scans show the effect of different dosages after a year
Dr Alfred Sandrock of the biotech company Biogen, which worked with
the University of Zurich on the research, said: "Phase 3 really needs
to be done and I hope it will confirm what we have seen in this study.
"One
day I could envisage treating people who have no symptoms because if
you have amyloid in the brain it's likely you'll develop Alzheimer's one
day."
'Significant step'
However,
there have been many disappointments in Alzheimer's drug development,
and it is over a decade since the last drug for people with the
condition was licensed.
Other experts have welcomed this latest
research - but with caution.
Dr David Reynolds, chief scientific officer at
Alzheimer's Research UK, said the results provided "tantalising evidence
that a new class of drug to treat the disease may be on the horizon".
And
Dr James Pickett, head of research at the Alzheimer's Society, added:
"What is most compelling is that more amyloid was cleared when people
took higher doses of the drug.
"No existing treatments for
Alzheimer's directly interfere with the disease process and so a drug
that actually slows the progress of the disease by clearing amyloid
would be a significant step."
However, Dr Tara Spires-Jones, of
the Centre for Cognitive and Neural Systems at the University of
Edinburgh, said: "I am cautiously optimistic about this treatment, but
trying not to get too excited because many drugs make it through this
early stage of testing then go on to fail in larger trials."
And
John Hardy, professor of neuroscience at University College London,
said: "These new data are tantalising but they are not yet definitive."
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