New research shows another experimental Alzheimer's drug can modestly slow patients' inevitable worsening.
Patients given monthly infusions of Eli Lilly and Co.'s donanemab declined about four to seven months more slowly than those given dummy infusions in a large study. – Another experimental Alzheimer’s drug can modestly slow patients’ inevitable worsening — by about four to seven months, researchers reported Monday.
Both donanemab and Leqembi are lab-made antibodies, administered by IV, that target one Alzheimer’s culprit, sticky amyloid buildup in the brain. And both drugs come with a serious safety concern — brain swelling or bleeding that in the Lilly study was linked to three deaths. Lilly’s study enrolled people ages 60 to 85 who were in early stages of Alzheimer’s. Half received once-a-month infusions of donanemab and half dummy infusions for 18 months.
How much difference does that make? It means donanemab slowed patients’ worsening by about four to seven months, the JAMA report concluded. Scientists already know that patients getting any amyloid-targeted therapy need repeat brain scans to check for those side effects — a costly and time-consuming hurdle.
Another concern: More than 90% of the study’s participants were white, leaving little data about how other populations might respond, Alzheimer's specialist Jennifer Manly of Columbia University wrote in JAMA.
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