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

Anti-amyloid drug shows signs of preventing Alzheimer’s dementia

Clinical trial of people destined to develop early-onset Alzheimer’s disease shows eliminating amyloid from brain may prevent symptoms, supports need for confirmatory studies

Anti-amyloid drug shows signs of preventing Alzheimer’s dementia
2025-03-20
(Press-News.org) An experimental drug appears to reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s-related dementia in people destined to develop the disease in their 30s, 40s or 50s, according to the results of a study led by the Knight Family Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network-Trials Unit (DIAN-TU), which is based at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. The findings suggest – for the first time in a clinical trial – that early treatment to remove amyloid plaques from the brain many years before symptoms arise can delay the onset of Alzheimer’s dementia.

The study is published March 19 in The Lancet Neurology.

The international study involved 73 people with rare, inherited genetic mutations that cause the overproduction of amyloid in the brain, all but guaranteeing that they will develop Alzheimer’s disease in middle age. For a subgroup of 22 participants who had no cognitive problems at the study’s start and who received the drug the longest – an average of eight years – the treatment lowered the risk of developing symptoms from essentially 100% to about 50%, according to a primary analysis of the data and supported by multiple sensitivity analyses supporting the trend.

“Everyone in this study was destined to develop Alzheimer’s disease and some of them haven’t yet,” said senior author Randall J. Bateman, MD, the Charles F. and Joanne Knight Distinguished Professor of Neurology at WashU Medicine.  “We don’t yet know how long they will remain symptom-free – maybe a few years or maybe decades. In order to give them the best opportunity to stay cognitively normal, we have continued treatment with another anti-amyloid antibody in hopes they will never develop symptoms at all. What we do know is that it’s possible at least to delay the onset of the symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease and give people more years of healthy life.”

The findings provide new evidence to support the so-called amyloid hypothesis of Alzheimer’s disease, which posits that the first step on the road to dementia is the build-up of amyloid plaques in the brain, and that removing such plaques or blocking their formation can stop symptoms from arising. For this study, Bateman and colleagues evaluated the effects of an experimental anti-amyloid drug to see if the medication could prevent the development of dementia.

The study population consisted of people who had originally enrolled in the Knight Family DIAN-TU-001, the first Alzheimer’s prevention trial in the world, and then continued into an extension of the trial in which they received an anti-amyloid drug. Currently led by Bateman and funded primarily by the Alzheimer’s Association, GHR Foundation and the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Knight Family DIAN-TU-001 was launched in 2012 to evaluate anti-amyloid drugs as preventive therapies for Alzheimer’s disease. All participants in the trial had no to very mild cognitive decline, and were within 15 years before to 10 years after their expected age of Alzheimer’s onset, based on family history.

When the trial concluded in 2020, Bateman and colleagues reported that one of the drugs – gantenerumab, made by Roche and its U.S. affiliate, Genentech – lowered amyloid levels in the brain and improved some measures of Alzheimer’s proteins. But the researchers did not see evidence of cognitive benefit yet because the group without symptoms  – regardless of whether they were on drug or placebo – hadn’t declined. These mixed results in the group without symptoms led the trial leaders to launch an open-label extension so the researchers could continue studying gantenerumab’s effects and determine whether higher doses or longer treatment could prevent or delay cognitive decline.

All DIAN-TU participants who carried a high-risk Alzheimer’s genetic mutation were eligible to continue into the extension study, regardless of whether they had received gantenerumab, another drug or a placebo during the trial. Because all participants in the extension received the experimental drug, there was no internal control group. Instead, the researchers compared the extension participants to people in a related study known as the DIAN Observational who had received no drug treatment, and to placebo-treated DIAN-TU participants who did not continue into the extension.

Originally planned for three years, the extension was cut short in mid-2023 following the decision by Roche/Genentech to discontinue the development of gantenerumab in November 2022 after data from their pivotal Phase 3 GRADUATE I and II trials evaluating gantenerumab in people with early symptomatic Alzheimer’s disease did not meet their primary endpoint of slowing clinical decline. The average participant in the extension trial had been treated for 2.6 years at the time it was terminated.

Analysis of this data set revealed that removal of brain amyloid plaques years before symptoms are expected to arise delayed symptom onset and dementia progression, although the results were only statistically significant for the subgroup of people who started with no symptoms and were treated the longest. For the group of participants who received gantenerumab only during the extension for two to three years because they had received another drug or placebo during the original trial, there have been no observable effects on cognitive function yet. The longest-treated group had received gantenerumab for eight years on average, suggesting that treatment years before onset may be necessary for prevention.

In the longest-treated group, the effect was strong:  Treatment cut the risk of developing symptoms in half. This 50% effect size seen in the longest gantenerumab-treated group is the result of a calculation that takes into consideration not only how many people developed symptoms but when symptoms emerged for each participant compared to his or her expected age of onset. That means the effect size could change as time goes on. Some of the participants are at or just past their expected age of onset. The longer they go without developing symptoms, the greater the effect size will be. Conversely, some who are healthy now may develop symptoms down the road, reducing the effect size.

Gantenerumab and other anti-amyloid drugs have been linked to a side effect known as amyloid-related imaging abnormalities, or ARIA. The abnormalities are detectable on brain scans and represent tiny spots of blood in the brain or localized swelling of the brain. In clinical trials, most cases of ARIA aren’t noticed by participants (that is, they show no symptoms) and resolve on their own, but a minority are more serious and, rarely, deaths have been linked to the side effect. In this study, ARIA rates were one-third higher than in the original clinical trial (30% vs 19%), which the researchers attribute to the higher doses used in the extension. Two participants developed such severe ARIA that they needed to be taken off the drug, at which point they recovered. There were no life-threatening adverse events and no deaths. Overall, the safety profile of gantenerumab in the extension was similar to that in the original trial and in other clinical trials of gantenerumab, the researchers said.

In order to answer the question of how long dementia can be delayed by removing amyloid, the Knight Family DIAN-TU, based at WashU Medicine, has launched the Knight Family DIAN-TU Amyloid Removal Trial, with initial funding from the Alzheimer’s Association. Because gantenerumab was discontinued, most of the participants in the international open-label extension have started receiving lecanemab, an anti-amyloid drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2023 to slow cognitive decline in people who already have symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease. Data from this phase of the extension trial have not yet been analyzed. WashU Medicine researchers have submitted an NIH grant that, if approved, would provide funding to finish the trial. That grant is still pending NIH review.

While the trial was limited to people with genetic forms of Alzheimer’s that lead to early onset, Bateman and colleagues expect that the study’s results will inform prevention and treatment efforts for all forms of Alzheimer’s disease. Both early-onset and late-onset Alzheimer’s disease start with amyloid slowly collecting in the brain two decades before memory and thinking problems arise.  Further, all trial results from these early-onset Alzheimer’s mutation families have been replicated in late-onset Alzheimer’s disease trials.

“If late-onset Alzheimer’s prevention trials have similar results to the DIAN-TU trials, there soon could be Alzheimer’s preventions available for the general population,” Bateman said. “I am highly optimistic now, as this could be the first clinical evidence of what will become preventions for people at risk for Alzheimer’s disease.  One day soon, we may be delaying the onset of Alzheimer’s disease for millions.”

While gantenerumab is no longer being developed, other anti-amyloid drugs are being evaluated as preventive medications for Alzheimer’s disease.

“These exciting preliminary findings hint very clearly at the potential role of lowering beta amyloid in prevention of Alzheimer’s disease,” said Maria C. Carrillo, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association chief science officer and medical affairs lead. “The Alzheimer’s Association looks forward with great anticipation to replication, extension and expansion of this genuinely unprecedented and groundbreaking research, and we have made a significant investment in ensuring these important scientific questions can be investigated. Discoveries like this convincingly illustrate why it is so important for research into Alzheimer’s and all diseases that cause dementia to continue, expand and accelerate.”

The Knight Family DIAN-TU is evaluating the investigational amyloid-removing drug remternetug, made by Eli Lilly and Co., in the Primary Prevention Trial. Like the DIAN-TU secondary prevention trials, the Primary Prevention Trial involves members of families that carry dominant Alzheimer’s mutations, but Primary Prevention participants are much younger. The trial is enrolling people as young as 18 who have few or no detectable Alzheimer’s-related molecular changes in their brains, up to 25 years before the expected onset of dementia symptoms, to determine whether stopping the early molecular changes that lead to symptomatic Alzheimer’s disease can prevent the disease from ever taking hold.

Bateman RJ, Li Y, McDade EM, et al. Safety and efficacy of long-term gantenerumab treatment in dominantly inherited Alzheimer’s disease: an open label extension of the phase 2/3 multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled platform DIAN-TU Trial. The Lancet Neurology. March 19, 2025.

The DIAN-TU-001 portion of this study was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute on Aging (grant numbers U01AG042791, U01AG042791-S1 (FNIH and Accelerating Medicines Partnership), R01AG046179, R01AG053267, R01AG053267-S1 and R01AG053267-S2); the Alzheimer’s Association; Eli Lilly and Company; F. Hoffman-LaRoche Ltd.; Avid Radiopharmaceuticals (a wholly owned subsidiary of Eli Lilly and Company); GHR Foundation; an anonymous organization; Cerveau Technologies; Cogstate and Signant. The DIAN-TU has also received funding from the DIAN-TU Pharma Consortium. The gantenerumab open-label extension was supported by the Alzheimer’s Association and F. Hoffman-LaRoche Ltd.

The content of this article is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

About Washington University School of Medicine

WashU Medicine is a global leader in academic medicine, including biomedical research, patient care and educational programs with 2,900 faculty. Its National Institutes of Health (NIH) research funding portfolio is the second largest among U.S. medical schools and has grown 56% in the last seven years. Together with institutional investment, WashU Medicine commits well over $1 billion annually to basic and clinical research innovation and training. Its faculty practice is consistently within the top five in the country, with more than 1,900 faculty physicians practicing at 130 locations and who are also the medical staffs of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals of BJC HealthCare. WashU Medicine has a storied history in MD/PhD training, recently dedicated $100 million to scholarships and curriculum renewal for its medical students, and is home to top-notch training programs in every medical subspecialty as well as physical therapy, occupational therapy, and audiology and communications sciences.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Anti-amyloid drug shows signs of preventing Alzheimer’s dementia

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Sharing mealtimes with others linked to better wellbeing

2025-03-20
UCL Press Release Under embargo until Thursday 20th March, 00:01 UK time / Wednesday 19th March, 20:01 Eastern US time Not peer reviewed | Literature review & data analysis | People   People who share more mealtimes with others are more likely to report higher levels of life satisfaction and wellbeing, finds research led by a UCL academic for the World Happiness Report. In chapter three of the report, Sharing Meals with Others, the researchers from UCL, University of Oxford, Harvard University and Gallup found that meal sharing as an indicator ...

New DESI results: Evidence mounts for evolving dark energy

New DESI results: Evidence mounts for evolving dark energy
2025-03-19
A new analysis of data collected over three years by the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) collaboration provides even stronger evidence than the group’s previous datasets that dark energy, long thought to be a “cosmological constant,” might be evolving over time in unexpected ways. Dr. Mustapha Ishak-Boushaki, professor of physics at The University of Texas at Dallas, is co-chair of the DESI working group that interprets cosmological survey data gathered by the international collaboration, which includes more than 900 researchers ...

New DESI results strengthen hints that dark energy may evolve

New DESI results strengthen hints that dark energy may evolve
2025-03-19
The fate of the universe hinges on the balance between matter and dark energy: the fundamental ingredient that drives its accelerating expansion. New results from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) collaboration use the largest 3D map of our universe ever made to track dark energy’s influence over the past 11 billion years. Researchers see hints that dark energy, widely thought to be a “cosmological constant,” might be evolving over time in unexpected ways. DESI is an international experiment with more than 900 researchers from over 70 institutions around the world and is managed by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley ...

DESI opens access to the largest 3D map of the universe yet

DESI opens access to the largest 3D map of the universe yet
2025-03-19
The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) is mapping millions of celestial objects to better understand dark energy: the mysterious driver of our universe’s accelerating expansion. Today, the DESI collaboration released a new collection of data for anyone in the world to investigate. The dataset is the largest of its kind, with information on 18.7 million objects: roughly 4 million stars, 13.1 million galaxies, and 1.6 million quasars (extremely bright but distant objects powered by supermassive black holes at their cores).  While the experiment’s ...

New study reveals high levels of fusarium mycotoxins in seized cannabis from Arizona and California

New study reveals high levels of fusarium mycotoxins in seized cannabis from Arizona and California
2025-03-19
A recent study conducted by researchers from Arizona State University has uncovered alarming levels of Fusarium mycotoxins in illicit cannabis samples seized in Arizona and California.   The study found that 16% of the 118 samples tested positive for harmful mycotoxins, posing potential health risks to consumers. This groundbreaking research highlights the unregulated and dangerous nature of black-market cannabis.   The study, led by Arizona State University professor Maxwell Leung, analyzed cannabis samples obtained between November 2023 and June 2024 from law enforcement seizures. The samples ...

Sleepier during the day? For some older people, it’s linked to twice the dementia risk

2025-03-19
MINNEAPOLIS — For women in their 80s, experiencing increasing sleepiness during the day over a five-year period is associated with double the risk of developing dementia during that time, according to a study published on March 19, 2025, online in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The study does not prove that daytime sleepiness causes dementia; it only shows an association. “Sleep is essential for cognitive health, as it allows the brain to rest and rejuvenate, enhancing our ability to think clearly and remember information,” said study author Yue Leng, PhD, of the University of California, San Francisco. “However, ...

Is increased sleepiness in our 80s tied to higher dementia risk?

2025-03-19
A study in Neurology, led by Yue Leng, PhD, and Sasha Milton, followed the sleep patterns of 733 older female participants to see if specific patterns of change were associated with a higher risk of dementia. The participants, whose average age was 83, were monitored by wrist devices that track movement and time spent asleep. They had normal cognition at the start of the study. What They Discovered  At the end of the study, five years later, 13% had developed dementia. This included 25 participants (8%) with stable sleep patterns, 39 (15%) ...

South Africa and China establish record-breaking 12,900 km ultra-secure quantum satellite link

South Africa and China establish record-breaking 12,900 km ultra-secure quantum satellite link
2025-03-19
Scientists from South Africa and China have successfully established the world’s longest intercontinental ultra-secure quantum satellite link, spanning 12,900 km. Using the Chinese quantum microsatellite Jinan-1, launched into low Earth orbit, this milestone marks the first-ever quantum satellite communication link established in the Southern Hemisphere. In this demonstration, quantum keys were generated in real-time through Quantum Key Distribution (QKD), enabling the secure encryption of images transmitted between ground stations in China and South Africa via one-time pad encryption—considered unbreakable. The results from this pioneering ...

A rule-changer for ceramic fuel cells

A rule-changer for ceramic fuel cells
2025-03-19
A joint research team from Southeast University and Shenzhen University has developed a novel function of semiconductor-ionic conductor (SIC) using a Cu-Sm co-doping ceria (SCDC). By enhancing ionic and electronic conductivity in the same time, the team is able to achieve superionic transport property and excellent fuel cell performance using the SIC electrolyte. It changes traditional pure ionic electrolyte to SIC with strong electron-ion coupling synergistic effect to obtain exceptional ionic conductivity and fuel cell performance. This study leads to a new way to develop advanced electrolytes and fuel cells in energy conversion technologies. Ceramic ...

Good vibrations: Scientists discover a groundbreaking method for exciting phonon-polaritons

2025-03-19
NEW YORK, March 19, 2025 – Imagine a world where your phone stays cool no matter how long you use it, and it’s also equipped with tiny sensors that can identify dangerous chemicals or pollutants with unparalleled sensitivity and precision. Newly published research in the journal Nature demonstrates a new way of generating long-wave infrared and terahertz waves, which is an important step toward creating materials that can help realize these technological advances. The work, led by researchers at the Advanced Science Research Center at the CUNY Graduate Center (CUNY ASRC) paves the way for cheaper, smaller long-wave infrared light sources and more efficient device cooling. Phonon-polaritons ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Aotearoa once home to elephant seals

Green recipe: Engineered yeast boosts D-lactic acid production

Computational drug discovery: Exploring natural products targeting SARS-CoV-2

Almost half of children with complicated appendicitis can recover from surgery at home

Sensory t-shirt collects patient data and enables shorter postoperative hospital stay

Worse outcomes for men who avoid prostate cancer screening

Shrinking Andean glaciers threaten water supply of 90 million people, global policy makers warne

Women’s earnings fall 10% four years after menopause diagnosis

Researchers capture first laser-driven, high-resolution CT scans of dense objects 

Cambridge team uses powerful new MRI scans to enable life-changing surgery in first for adults with epilepsy

NRL's narrow field imager launches on NASA's PUNCH mission

Galapagos birds exhibit ‘road rage’ due to noise

Groundbreaking study finds AI-driven interviews with children may boost accuracy in witness accounts

New framework to measure economic well-being considers new and free goods and services; addition of digital goods boosts growth

Augmented reality guidance for placing intracranial drains now clinically validated

How feathers develop in chickens

Insomniac fruit fly mutants show enhanced memory despite severe sleep loss

Seals can sense their own circulating blood oxygen and it keeps them from drowning

Infants encode short-lived hippocampal memories

Mountain uplift and dynamic topography shapes biodiversity over deep time

Majority of carbon sequestered on land is locked in nonliving carbon reservoirs

From dinosaurs to birds: the origins of feather formation

Why don’t we remember being a baby? New study provides clues

The cell’s powerhouses: Molecular machines enable efficient energy production

Most of the carbon sequestered on land is stored in soil and water

New US Academic Alliance for the IPCC opens critical nomination access

Breakthrough molecular movie reveals DNA’s unzipping mechanism with implications for viral and cancer treatments

New function discovered for protein important in leukemia

Tiny component for record-breaking bandwidth

In police recruitment efforts, humanizing officers can boost interest

[Press-News.org] Anti-amyloid drug shows signs of preventing Alzheimer’s dementia
Clinical trial of people destined to develop early-onset Alzheimer’s disease shows eliminating amyloid from brain may prevent symptoms, supports need for confirmatory studies