German database study
hints diabetes drug cuts Alzheimer's risk
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[July 14, 2014] By
Ransdell Pierson
(Reuters) - A large German
study is the latest clinical trial to suggest that a
cheap generic treatment for diabetes can stave off
symptoms of Alzheimer's disease, although conclusive
proof from a more formal trial could be about five years
away.
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Earlier studies have suggested that people and animals given the
widely used pill for type-2 diabetes, called pioglitazone, were less
likely to develop Alzheimer's or other forms of dementia. The
medicine is sold under the brand name Actos by Japanese drugmaker
Takeda Pharmaceutical Co Ltd.
Researchers in the new trial used routine data from German
healthcare plans for the years 2004 until 2010. They tracked a
database of about 146,000 patients age 60 and older who initially
did not have evidence of dementia.
The analysis showed that 13,841 subjects eventually developed
dementia, and that for those taking pioglitazone the risk of
dementia was significantly reduced with each additional three months
the drug was prescribed.
"The long-term use of pioglitazone reduces the risk of dementia
incidence," based on examination of health claims data, concluded
Anne Fink, a researcher for the German Center for Neurodegenerative
Diseases who helped lead the trial. Her data was presented Monday at
the annual meeting of the Alzheimer's Association International
Conference in Copenhagen.
Fink speculated that pioglitazone helped prevent Alzheimer's by
reducing inflammation in the brain and nervous system, although
other effects of the drug might also be at play.
Separate earlier studies of patients with type 2 diabetes have found
that those with poor blood sugar control are much more likely to
develop dementia. Moreover, those taking medicines like Actos -
called thiazolidinediones (TZDs) - have been shown to be at almost
20 percent less risk of Alzheimer's than those who took insulin.
Takeda last year began a five-year study, in collaboration with
privately held Zinfandel Pharmaceuticals Inc, to assess whether low
doses of pioglitazone can delay the onset of mild cognitive
impairment due to Alzheimer's disease. Using a special diagnostic
test, the trial will enroll cognitively normal people who have
genetic variations known to increase the risk of early onset of
Alzheimer's symptoms.
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Stephen Brannan, in charge of central nervous system drug
development at Takeda, speculated that pioglitazone may help arrest
Alzheimer's by improving the function of mitochondria:
energy-producing compartments in every cell of the body except red
blood cells.
"The brain requires a lot of energy," he said in an interview,
adding that more efficient mitochondria could improve brain function
and thereby help stave off Alzheimer's.
Some 18 million Americans suffer from Alzheimer's, according to
Takeda, with the rate of occurrence doubling every five years for
those between 65 and 85 years of age.
(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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