Older Eli Lilly's drug fails Alzheimer's prevention trial
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[March 09, 2023]
By Deena Beasley
(Reuters) - An early-generation Alzheimer's drug from Eli Lilly and Co
failed to slow cognitive decline in patients treated before they showed
symptoms, but the large trial found a strong link between levels of
brain plaques and disease progression, the company said on Wednesday.
The experimental drug, solanezumab, was designed to target only soluble
forms of amyloid beta, a toxic protein that accumulates in the brains of
people with Alzheimer's. The drug, which does not clear existing
plaques, was abandoned by Lilly in 2016 after it did not slow loss of
mental functioning in patients with mild Alzheimer's symptoms in
clinical trials.
The latest data highlight the need for "more aggressive therapies to
lower plaque," and will inform the structure of future trials of amyloid-targeting
drugs, said John Sims, senior medical director at Lilly.
The U.S. drugmaker is in late-stage development with two other
Alzheimer's drugs, donanemab and remternetug, that specifically target
deposited amyloid and have been shown to clear plaque in treated
patients.
Although Lilly halted development of solanezumab, it supported, along
with the National Institute on Aging and others, the randomized clinical
trial of the drug in over 1,100 asymptomatic Alzheimer's patients.
The study, which started in 2013, did not meet its primary goal of
slowing cognitive decline, and placebo patients actually did better on
secondary goals, such as changes in daily activity. Just over 36% of
trial participants developed symptomatic Alzheimer's, and rates of
progression were similar for both the treatment and placebo groups,
Lilly said.
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Lilly Biotechnology Center is shown in
San Diego, California, U.S. March 1, 2023. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File
Photo
"Even at this preclinical stage of
Alzheimer's disease, we are going to have to be more aggressive with
amyloid." said Dr. Reisa Sperling, a neurologist at
Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital, who led the study.
"We need to get people's amyloid lower, very fast, and keep it
there."
Lilly expects to announce results from a Phase III trial of
donanemab for early Alzheimer's before the end of June. If the
findings are robust, the company will file for U.S. approval, which
could occur in late 2023, Sims said.
The company is conducting a 3,300-patient trial of donanemab in
asymptomatic Alzheimer's patients. It is also launching a late-stage
trial of remternetug, which can be given by subcutaneous injection.
"We hope that if we can intervene on the amyloid and get rid of the
plaque very early that we will have a fairly large effect on
preventing people from becoming symptomatic," Sims said.
(Additional reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago; Editing by
Bill Berkrot)
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