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There were potential safety concerns. There were 15 deaths among the 673 in bapineuzumab group versus only five among the 448 in the placebo group. Six of the deaths in the drug group were from various forms of cancer. But a wider review of thousands of patients in multiple studies of bapineuzumab found that cancer was not more common among those on the drug. The cancer deaths "were wide and varied, and they weren't a specific type of cancer, so that's not raising any red flags," said an independet expert, Dr. Maria Carrillo, a senior scientist at the Alzheimer's Association. "Biological changes do indicate positive effects in the treatment group," Carrillo said. "That gives us hope that if perhaps given earlier in the course of the disease, we can perhaps affect cognition." Salloway's study produced less evidence of benefit. Too few participants had brain imaging to make definitive conclusions about amyloid, and there was just a trend toward less of the nerve-damage substance in the group receiving the higher of two doses tested. The hopeful signs on biomarkers are "the silver lining" in studies that failed to show the drug was helping patients, said Dr. Eric Yuen, head of clinical development for J&J's Janssen Alzheimer Immunotherapy unit. Bapineuzumab is given as periodic intravenous infusions, and the companies have said they are stopping development of that form but continuing to test a version that can be given as a shot. More results on this drug and a similar one -- Eli Lilly & Co.'s solanezumab
-- will be presented at a conference in Boston next month. Lilly recently announced that combined results of two large studies of solanezumab suggested some benefit on cognition. ___ Online: Alzheimer's info: http://www.alzheimers.gov/ Alzheimer's Association: http://www.alz.org/
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