PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Questions over safety and effectiveness of new Alzheimer’s drug

Investigation raises concerns about excess deaths, missing safety data, questionable effectiveness, and financial ties among expert advisors. 7 of the 8 doctors on review panel received direct payments from drug companies

2024-09-25
(Press-News.org) The safety and effectiveness of donanemab - an Alzheimer’s drug recently approved by the US Food & Drug Administration (FDA) - is called into question in an investigation published by The BMJ today.

Journalists Jeanne Lenzer and Shannon Brownlee explore concerns not only about its effectiveness and the number of deaths among patients taking the drug, but also about financial ties to drug makers among the “independent” advisory panellists who recommended approval.

Donanemab, developed by Eli Lilly, is the latest in a new class of anti-amyloid drugs that deliver antibodies to target beta amyloid, a protein believed to cause Alzheimer's disease.

In January 2023, the FDA denied approval of donanemab, citing a “high rate” of missing data and questioning the drug’s long term safety. The agency noted a higher rate of treatment discontinuation due to adverse events (frequently brain hemorrhage and swelling) among patients on donanemab compared with placebo, and an “imbalance” in overall deaths.

Lilly acknowledged three deaths in patients on donanemab, and an outside company it hired to obtain the missing data found two additional deaths among patients in the donanemab arm and five deaths in the placebo arm. 

But Steven Goodman, an expert in clinical trial design at Stanford University, says it is not possible to assess the reliability of the new data without more details of the outside company’s methods.

“There was also no information on health outcomes in those patients other than death, nor the causes of the deaths,” he says, adding that the “failure to formally follow patients who stopped treatment was a significant design flaw, particularly when that discontinuation was partly due to adverse drug effects.”

The investigation also reveals that seven of the eight doctors appointed by the FDA to review donanemab received direct payments from drug companies. 

Three had financial ties to Lilly, two had ties to Roche, Lilly’s development partner in creating a new blood test for Alzheimer’s disease, and two others have patents on amyloid antibodies, and the eighth doctor had research funding from Janssen for another Alzheimer’s drug. 

Using the public database OpenPayments, members’ CVs, disclosures in published articles, and the Google patent ownership database, The BMJ found that individual advisers received up to $62 000 (£47 000; €56 000) for consulting and speaking fees and up to $10.5m in research grants from 2017 through 2023.

Asked about the extensive financial conflicts among the physician advisors found by The BMJ, the agency stated, “The FDA does not comment on matters related to individual members of an advisory committee.”

Lenzer and Brownlee also describe how the main (primary) outcome of the donanemab trials was changed during the trial from the widely accepted “clinical dementia rating scale—sum of boxes” (CDR-SB) to Lilly’s own integrated Alzheimer’s disease rating scale (iADRS).

And despite results failing to show a clinically meaningful difference between patients on the drug and placebo, Lilly stated that donanemab slowed progression of Alzheimer’s by 22%. The company has also promoted donanemab as “slowing decline by 35%.”

“That is a misleading statement,” says Alberto J Espay, a neurologist and specialist in clinical epidemiology and healthcare research at the University of Cincinnati. “That’s a relative difference that transforms a very tiny absolute difference into a number that seems impressive.”

[Ends] 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Additional GP funding has been squeezed this year, finds BMJ investigation

2024-09-25
Budgetary decisions by commissioners across England are affecting GPs’ ability to offer their patients what most people regard as essential services and forcing some practices to close, an investigation by The BMJ has found. This year, eight in 10 Integrated Care Boards (ICBs) - responsible for planning health services for their local population - either reduced or froze discretionary funding for general practices as a proportion of their overall budget for services such as taking blood, wound care, ...

AI could predict breast cancer risk via ‘zombie cells’

2024-09-25
Women worldwide could see better treatment with new AI technology which enables better detection of damaged cells and more precisely predict the risk of getting breast cancer, shows new research from the University of Copenhagen. Breast cancer is one of the most common types of cancer. In 2022, the disease caused 670,000 deaths worldwide. Now, a new study from the University of Copenhagen shows that AI can help women with improved treatment by scanning for irregular-looking cells to give better risk assessment. The study, published in The Lancet Digital Health, found that the AI technology was far better at predicting risk of cancer ...

Breakthrough research identifies new targets for wound healing

2024-09-25
(Thursday, 26 September 2024) Novel research, presented today at the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (EADV) Congress 2024, has identified key molecular targets that could significantly enhance the healing of both acute and chronic wounds.1  These findings represent a crucial advancement in wound care, paving the way for more effective treatment options and improved patient outcomes. Globally, acute and chronic wounds affect nearly one billion people.2 In particular, chronic wounds pose a substantial economic burden on healthcare systems and severely impact ...

Are branch faults the “on-ramps” that lead to great continental transform earthquakes?

2024-09-25
The five largest continental transform earthquakes since 2000 all originated on a branch of the main fault—and two researchers predict that the next great earthquake of this type will also get its start on a branch or splay fault. Last year’s magnitude 7.8 Pazarcık earthquake in Türkiye was one of these large and damaging earthquakes, where two continental tectonic plates slide past each other horizontally. That earthquake began on a branch fault, as did the 2001 magnitude 7.8 Kokoxili earthquake in northern Tibet, the 2002 magnitude 7.9 Denali earthquake in Alaska, the 2008 magnitude 7.9 Wenchuan earthquake in China, and the 2016 ...

Tumour-specific antibodies able to detect melanoma in its earliest stages, new study shows

2024-09-25
(Thursday, 26 September 2024, Amsterdam, Netherlands) Innovative research has unveiled promising advancements in melanoma detection, which could significantly enhance diagnosis and prognosis by identifying the disease at its earliest, most treatable stages.1 This new method, presented today at the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (EADV) Congress 2024, uses tumour-specific profiling to detect antibodies unique to stage I and II melanoma patients. Melanoma, a skin cancer with a high mutation rate,2 ...

When a child hurts, validating their pain may be the best first aid

2024-09-25
Whether it’s a sore arm or a fear of injections, how a child is treated when they present with pain could significantly affect how they respond to and manage pain later in life.   In a new study from the University of South Australia, researchers say that parents and doctors should be mindful of how they talk to and treat children experiencing pain – no matter how big or small the injury – knowing that these foundational experiences can be carried forward into adulthood.   Drawing from diverse research across developmental psychology, child mental health, and pain sciences, researchers say that it may be important to validate children’s pain by ...

Single-dose gene therapy is potentially life-changing for adults with hemophilia B

2024-09-25
PHILADELPHIA – Adults with hemophilia B saw their number of bleeding episodes drop by an average of 71 percent after a single infusion of gene therapy, according to the results of an international Phase III clinical trial published today in the New England Journal of Medicine by researchers from the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and a multicenter group of investigators. Hemophilia is a genetic disorder that limits the blood’s ability to clot and affects around 30,000 people in the United States, ...

NEJM: Results from targeted therapy for ulcerative colitis study

2024-09-25
An international placebo-controlled study led by Cedars-Sinai suggests that a targeted drug therapy that was developed by researchers at Cedars-Sinai is safe and effective at helping people with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis reach clinical remission. Results from the multicenter Phase II study, ARTEMIS-UC, were published in The New England Journal of Medicine. Ulcerative colitis is a type of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) that damages the digestive tract, causing stomach cramping, diarrhea, weight loss and rectal bleeding. ...

Study finds certain MS therapies may not slow disability progression

2024-09-25
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2024 MINNEAPOLIS – In people with primary progressive multiple sclerosis (MS), a new study has found no difference in the amount of time before disability worsened between people taking certain medications and those not receiving treatment. The study is published in the September 25, 2024, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. With MS, the body’s immune system attacks myelin, the fatty, white substance that insulates and protects the nerves. People with ...

Are gender and sexual identity linked to brain health?

2024-09-25
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2024 MINNEAPOLIS – LGBTQ+ people may be more likely to have negative brain health outcomes, including a higher risk of dementia and late-life depression, than people who are cisgender and straight, according to a study published in the September 25, 2024, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. These results do not prove that sexual or gender diversity causes neurological diseases, they only show an association. LGBTQ+ refers to people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Firearm laws restricting large-capacity magazines effective in reducing child deaths in mass shootings

Black infants with heart abnormalities more likely to die in first year

Dangerous practice ‘chroming’ featured in videos on social media platform popular among youth

Firearm injuries lead to more complications, greater risk of death and higher inpatient costs than other injuries

Racial justice activism, advocacy found to reduce depression, anxiety in some teens

Parents open to firearms counseling from doctors; Ensuring secure storage remains a challenge

Childhood opioid prescription rates vary by patient’s background, research finds

Children in foster care with disabilities face significant challenges

Asthma rates lower in children who received only breast milk at birth hospital

Water-absorbing beads pose increasing hazard for young children; researchers test methods on how to shrink them

Caregivers underestimate suicide as the leading cause of firearm death: study

Anti-bullying, sexual harassment resources increase in US schools but gaps remain

Social media used to facilitate sexual assault in children: new research

Racial disparities exist in emergency department treatment of children with unintentional ingestions

Advances in endovascular therapy for stroke patients

The Lancet Public Health: MMR vaccine remains the best protection against measles - modelling study in England suggests level of protection decreases slightly over time

Babies born after fertility treatment have higher risk of heart defects

New research confirms link between perceived stress and psoriasis relapse

Call to action: A blueprint for change in acute and critical care nursing

Who transports what here?

Fitness loss through spontaneous mutations will not impact viability of human populations in the near future

Prize recognizes discovery of how cell population protects our airways – and keeps them clear

Team led by UMass Amherst debunks research showing Facebook’s news-feed algorithm curbs election misinformation

Science publishes eLetter on 2023 study by Guess et al., as well as response by Guess et al.

Supreme Court ruling could strip protections from up to 90 million acres of US wetlands

Ancient, buried wood inspires a possible low-cost method to store carbon

Removal of marine plastic fishery debris greatly reduces entanglement threat for endangered Hawaiian monk seals

Climate change likely to increase diarrheal disease hospitalizations by 2100s

Cleveland Clinic researchers discover new bacterium that causes gut immunodeficiency

Research reveals impact of gut microbiome on hormone levels in mice

[Press-News.org] Questions over safety and effectiveness of new Alzheimer’s drug
Investigation raises concerns about excess deaths, missing safety data, questionable effectiveness, and financial ties among expert advisors. 7 of the 8 doctors on review panel received direct payments from drug companies