Options
» Caregivers
» Fight the Fight
» Items of Interest
» Prevention
» Research
» Treatment
» Weekly Videos

Ads




Enjoy Mediterranean Diet Food.  Free shipping on orders over $50

Newsletter
Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon
For
The Weekly Newsletter, just enter your email:




Research
  Print    Email 

Doctors discussing clinical trial results
Dr. Montine reacted to tarenflurbil's results by calling on researchers to find "a multimodal approach to prevention and treatment."

Although there were promising results in a phase 2 trial, patients with mild Alzheimer disease who received the drug tarenflurbil as part of a phase 3 trial did not have better outcomes on measures of cognitive decline or loss of activities of daily living compared to patients who received placebo, according to a study in the December 16 issue of JAMA.

A leading theory on the pathophysiology of Alzheimer disease (AD) is the overproduction of amyloid-β (Aβ; a peptide of certain amino acids that appear to be the main constituent of amyloid plaques in the brains of patients with AD), particularly 42 amino acid peptide Aβ42. "Tarenflurbil, a selective Aβ42-lowering agent, demonstrated encouraging results on cognitive and functional outcomes among mildly affected patients in an earlier phase 2 trial," the authors write.

Robert C. Green, M.D., M.P.H., of the Boston University Schools of Medicine and Public Health, and colleagues conducted a large phase 3, randomized trial of tarenflurbil for patients with mild AD to determine its efficacy, safety and tolerability. The study, conducted at 133 trial sites in the United States, included 1,684 participants who were randomized, of whom 1,649 were included in the analysis, and 1,046 completed the 18-month trial. Patients were randomized to tarenflurbil, 800 mg, or placebo, administered twice a day.

The researchers found that tarenflurbil had no beneficial effect on the primary outcomes of cognition and activities of daily living after 18 months. There were also no significant differences on secondary outcomes, which included other AD assessment measures such as quality of life and caregiver burden.

Regarding adverse events, more participants taking tarenflurbil than those taking placebo experienced dizziness, upper respiratory tract infections and anemia.

"Our results are … a reminder that interventions affecting amyloid have not yet been shown to alter the course of AD," the authors conclude.

Thomas J. Montine, M.D., Ph.D., of the University of Washington, and Eric B. Larson, M.D., M.P.H., of the Group Health Research Institute, Seattle, commented, "The null outcome for the leading γ-secretase modulator [tarenflurbil] in a phase 3 trial and the surprisingly strong association between plasma leptin and incident Alzheimer disease underscore the need to broaden the current view of potential therapeutic approaches to cognitive impairment and dementia in older individuals."

"Research must seek a fuller understanding of the complex convergence of Alzheimer disease with vascular disease and Lewy body disease [a type of dementia], the application of biomarkers and other surrogates to clinical trials to quantify specific pharmacologic effects, and a multimodal approach to prevention and treatment. Doing so could have profound effects on the increasing numbers of older persons and on the societies confronting the global challenge of late-life dementias in decades to come."

Bookmark and Share


READ RELATED ARTICLES


Developing new medications

Flurizan Fails to Achieve Significance on Either Co-Primary Endpoint; Its Developer, Myriad Genetics, Has Decided to Discontinue Its Development of Flurizan.

 
Read More...


More Information:

Effect of Tarenflurbil on Cognitive Decline and Activities of Daily Living in Patients With Mild Alzheimer Disease: A Randomized Controlled Trial (JAMA. 2009;302[23]:2557-2564)

Editorial: Late-Life Dementias - Does This Unyielding Global Challenge Require a Broader View? (JAMA. 2009;302[23]:2593-2594)

Source:
American Medical Association (AMA)


Week of December 20 - December 27, 2009

Reviewed by
Dr. Boaz Ancselovic, MD, Geriatrician, Alzheimer's Weekly.
Edited by Peter Berger, Alzheimer's Weekly.
COPYRIGHT © 2009 Alzheimer's Weekly LLC.
All Rights Reserved.




« Back
Most Read In This Section
Prana's Progress Inhibits Alzheimer's Damage

Reversal of Alzheimer’s Symptoms Within Minutes Reported in New Study

Progress on the "Oklahoma City Vaccination"

FDA-approved Gammagard Increases Antibodies That Clear Alzheimer's

Epix Trial Improved Alz Scores in Just Two Weeks

The "IDENTITY" Trial Enters Decisive Phase

14 Leading Researchers Explain Alzheimer's

Caprospinol Makes the List of the 6 Top Investigational Alzheimer's Drugs for 2008

Newsletter

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon  Weekly Newsletter
Just enter your Email:

Advertisement
Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon
Free Weekly Newsletter.
Just enter your email: