Injected version of Eisai/Biogen Alzheimer's drug works as well as IV
Leqembi
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[October 26, 2023]
By Julie Steenhuysen and Deena Beasley
BOSTON (Reuters) -An injected version of Eisai and Biogen's Alzheimer's
drug Leqembi works as well as the current intravenous version at
removing toxic brain plaques, according to an analysis presented by
Eisai on Wednesday.
A weekly shot form of Leqembi, given as two consecutive injections,
could simplify use of the groundbreaking Alzheimer's treatment,
potentially allowing patients to receive the drug at home instead of
traveling to an infusion center twice a month.
The Japanese drugmaker's review compared data for 72 patients with early
Alzheimer's given Leqembi by subcutaneous injection to prior pivotal
trial results from 898 patients who received the drug by infusion.
The intravenous (IV) form of Leqembi won U.S. approval based on that
larger 18-month study showing the drug, which works by removing sticky
clumps of beta amyloid from the brain, slowed cognitive decline by 27%
for people with early Alzheimer's disease.
The latest data, presented at the Clinical Trials on Alzheimer's Disease
meeting in Boston, showed that after six months of treatment, the shot
form of Leqembi removed 14% more amyloid than the approved IV
formulation.
Blood concentration levels of the drug were 11% higher with subcutaneous
Leqembi than the IV version.
“The idea of having a much more accessible self-administered,
subcutaneous treatment is very important for this class of drugs. The
data was very encouraging,” said Dr. Eric Reiman, executive director of
the Banner Alzheimer's Institute, who was not affiliated with the
clinical trial.
Rates of infusion- or injection-related side effects were lower for the
subcutaneous formulation, but rates of serious side effects were higher.
The incidence of brain swelling known as ARIA-E was 16.7% for the
subcutaneous group and 12.6% for intravenous patients.
ARIA-H, or brain bleeding, occurred in 22.2% of the subcutaneous
patients versus 17.3% of the IV group.
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The Alzheimer's drug LEQEMBI is seen in this undated handout image
obtained by Reuters on January 20, 2023. Eisai/Handout via
REUTERS/File Photo
"We believe that the safety is
actually consistent," Priya Singhal, Biogen's head of development,
said in an interview.
"Because it's a very small cohort," she said of the 72-patient
group, "one or two cases can actually swing the numbers pretty
significantly."
Eisai and U.S. partner Biogen said they plan to apply for U.S.
approval of subcutaneous Leqembi by the end of March based on data
from 394 patients.
Shares of Biogen, which closed down 2.1% at $246.72 in regular
trading, were up 3.4% at $255.00 after hours.
LOW TAU DATA
Separately, Eisai presented an analysis of a small subgroup of
patients from its pivotal trial who had early Alzheimer's and low
levels of tau, a second protein linked with disease progression and
brain cell death.
It found that in the low-tau population, 60% of patients had
improvement in cognitive function, compared with 28% of the placebo
group.
Michael Irizarry, head of clinical research at Eisai's neurology
division, acknowledged in an interview that Alzheimer's does not
typically progress much for people in the earliest stages of the
disease, but said the data "supports treating as early as possible."
The U.S. government and Eisai are testing Leqembi to see if giving
the drug early can prevent dementia symptoms in people who are still
cognitively normal but have amyloid in their brain.
Roll-out of IV Leqembi, which has an annual list price of $26,500,
has been slow. Eisai executives said they continue to expect 10,000
U.S. patients to be on the drug by the end of March.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Boston and Deena Beasley in Los
Angeles; Editing by Bill Berkrot and Leslie Adler)
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