The Delaware Gazette

Last drugs standing: Key Alzheimer results coming

MARILYNN MARCHIONE

AP Chief Med­ical Writer

We’re about to find out if there will be a way any­time soon to slow the course of Alzheimer’s dis­ease. Results are due within a month or so from key stud­ies of two drugs that aim to clear the sticky plaque gum­ming up patients’ brains.

A piv­otal study of a third drug will end later this year, and results from a small, early test of it will be reported next week at an Alzheimer’s con­fer­ence in Van­cou­ver, British Columbia.

These three treat­ments are prac­ti­cally the “last men stand­ing” in late-stage tri­als, after more than a decade of failed efforts to develop a drug to halt the mind-robbing dis­ease. Cur­rent med­i­cines such as Ari­cept and Namenda just tem­porar­ily ease symp­toms. There is no known cure.

Experts say that if these fail, drug com­pa­nies may pull out of the field in frus­tra­tion, leav­ing lit­tle hope for the mil­lions of peo­ple with the dis­ease. An esti­mated 35 mil­lion peo­ple world­wide have demen­tia, which includes Alzheimer’s. In the U.S., experts say about 5 mil­lion have Alzheimer’s.

The three treat­ments being tested are not even drugs in the tra­di­tional, chem­i­cal sense. They are anti­bod­ies — pro­teins made by the immune sys­tem that pro­mote clear­ance of amy­loid, the stuff that forms the plaque.

It’s a strat­egy with a check­ered his­tory, and sci­en­tists aren’t even sure that amy­loid causes Alzheimer’s or that remov­ing it will do any good in peo­ple who already have symp­toms. But there are some hope­ful signs they may be on the right track.

“Every­body in the field is prob­a­bly hold­ing their breath that there is some­thing pos­i­tive to come out of these tri­als,” said Dr. Ronald Petersen, direc­tor of the Mayo Clinic’s Alzheimer’s Dis­ease Research Center.

“It may not be a home run” in terms of improv­ing mem­ory and cog­ni­tion, but if brain imag­ing or spinal fluid tests show the drugs are hit­ting their tar­get, “they will be regarded as suc­cesses,” he said.

William Thies, sci­en­tific direc­tor of the Alzheimer’s Asso­ci­a­tion, agreed.

Even if there is just a small effect, “that would be a huge find­ing because that would let you know you had a drug that worked,” he said. It then could be tried as a pre­ven­tive med­i­cine or given ear­lier in the course of the dis­ease when it may have more impact.

The three drugs and their devel­op­ers are:

—Bap­ineuzumab (bap-ih-NOOZ-uh-mab), by Pfizer Inc. and John­son & Johnson’s Janssen Alzheimer Immunother­apy unit.

—Solanezumab (sol-ah-NAYZ-uh-mab), by Eli Lilly & Co.

—Gam­ma­gard, by Bax­ter Inter­na­tional Inc.

All are given as peri­odic intra­venous infu­sions; some com­pa­nies are try­ing to refor­mu­late them so they could be given as shots. If a major study shows that one of the drugs works, there will be a huge effort to make it more con­ve­nient and prac­ti­cal, Thies predicted.

Still, it would prob­a­bly be very expensive.

The first two on the list are lab-made, sin­gle anti­bod­ies against amy­loid. Gam­ma­gard is intra­venous immune glob­u­lin, or IVIG — mul­ti­ple, nat­ural anti­bod­ies culled from blood. Half a dozen com­pa­nies already sell IVIG to treat immune sys­tem and blood dis­or­ders. It takes 130 plasma dona­tions to make enough to treat one patient for a year.

Treat­ing Alzheimer’s with IVIG would cost $2,000 to $5,000 every two weeks, depend­ing on the patient’s weight, said Dr. Nor­man Relkin, head of a mem­ory dis­or­ders pro­gram at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cor­nell Med­ical Cen­ter. He con­sults for some drug­mak­ers and has patents for tests that mea­sure amyloid.

Relkin is also lead­ing a late-stage, 400-patient study of Gam­ma­gard that will wrap up late this year. A much smaller, ear­lier study he led showed less brain shrink­age among peo­ple receiv­ing the drug than among those get­ting dummy infusions.

“It was so star­tling that I sent it to two lab­o­ra­to­ries for inde­pen­dent ver­i­fi­ca­tion,” Relkin said.

Next week, at the Alzheimer’s Asso­ci­a­tion Inter­na­tional Con­fer­ence in Canada, Relkin will give a three-year progress report on 16 patients out of the orig­i­nal 24 enrolled in that ear­lier study.

Jason Marder is among them. The New York City man, who turned 70 on Tues­day, was diag­nosed with Alzheimer’s more than eight years ago.

“It was dev­as­tat­ing,” said his wife, Karin Marder. “I thought, ‘Our life is over together as a cou­ple.’ But in fact it really has not been, and I have to attribute this really to the clin­i­cal trial.”

In the roughly five years that her hus­band has taken Gam­ma­gard, there has been decline in his health, but it is min­i­mal and the kind of slow­ing down you might expect from ordi­nary aging, she said. “He trav­els the sub­ways, he does things that you and I do. And our qual­ity of life together is what’s most impor­tant,” she said.

Jason Marder said he takes a cre­ative writ­ing class, runs errands for his wife and bikes around the city. As for his dis­ease, “I fight it as much as I can,” he said. “I feel I can han­dle it.”

It’s impos­si­ble to say how Marder would have fared with­out the treat­ment. Some patients decline rapidly, while oth­ers not for years. Hard evi­dence comes from large stud­ies like the one that will con­clude later this year, in which a group of patients get­ting the treat­ment is com­pared with a sim­i­lar group given dummy infusions.

Stud­ies on the two other drugs already have ended and results are being ana­lyzed. The main out­come is likely to be announced by the com­pa­nies as soon as it is known, and detailed results are to be pre­sented at sci­en­tific con­fer­ences in October.

Bap­ineuzumab is one of the largest bets ever placed in the field of Alzheimer’s dis­ease. More than 4,000 patients are par­tic­i­pat­ing in four stud­ies around the world — two in peo­ple with a gene that raises the risk of Alzheimer’s and two in peo­ple who don’t carry that gene.

The stud­ies, which started enrolling patients in 2007, involve brain scans every few months. “That’s enor­mously expen­sive and time-consuming,” said Dr. Eric Yuen, head of clin­i­cal devel­op­ment for Janssen. These exper­i­ments are just now yield­ing results.

Con­cern arose when an ear­lier study found pos­si­ble bleed­ing or brain abnor­mal­i­ties in up to 10 per­cent of patients on the drug. How­ever, most had no symp­toms and were able to resume treat­ment after a brief break, Yuen said. In fact, some researchers think these changes might be a sign the drug is work­ing to clear the amy­loid plaque.

The fact that inde­pen­dent mon­i­tors have not stopped the new stud­ies has made Dr. Reisa Sper­ling opti­mistic the drug will prove to be safe. Direc­tor of the Alzheimer’s cen­ter at Brigham and Women’s Hos­pi­tal in Boston, she has con­sulted for Janssen and Pfizer and enrolled patients in the studies.

Relkin, who is lead­ing the Gam­ma­gard study, said that if all three of these drugs fail, “we’re in trou­ble.” There hasn’t been a new drug even to help symp­toms in nine years, he said.

Petersen of the Mayo Clinic agrees.

“If they’re dead-flat neg­a­tive, the impact on the field and the impli­ca­tion for Big Pharma could be huge,” he said. Com­pa­nies “may bail” from the field entirely. “They may just say, ‘This nut is too tough to crack.’”

AP News Posted by on Jul 11 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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