Date: 8/06/2021 12:35:05
From: Bubblecar
ID: 1748556
Subject: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

US regulators have approved a new drug for Alzheimer’s the first for 20 years, but the decision is being met with mixed reactions.

BBC’s Fergus Walsh takes up the story:

We need to keep our feet on the ground.

This is not a miracle drug, nor a cure for Alzheimer’s but it is the first treatment which tackles the destructive mechanism in the brain that drives the destruction of neurons.

And that makes this a landmark moment.

But scientific opinion both here and the United States is divided. While some have welcomed approval, calling it a milestone for millions living with Alzheimer’s, others believe the drug will only have marginal benefits.

Alzheimer’s charities say they will be pressing for an early decision in the UK – but that could take another year.

Lastly, we don’t know how much aducanumab will cost – it could be tens of thousands of pounds per patient each year. And if approved, access will be limited to those who’ve had specialist brain scans to confirm their diagnosis.

Despite all the caveats, this is moment for very cautious celebration.

Prof Bart De Strooper, director of the UK Dementia Research Institute, said the decision to approve aducanumab marked “a hugely significant milestone” in the search for treatments for Alzheimer’s disease.

In the past decade, more than 100 potential Alzheimer’s treatments have flopped.

But while he hoped it would prove a turning point for millions of people with the condition, he said there were “still many barriers to overcome”.

Prof John Hardy, professor of neuroscience at University College London, said: “We have to be clear that, at best, this is a drug with marginal benefit which will help only very carefully selected patients.”

‘Grave error’

And Prof Robert Howard, professor of old age psychiatry at UCL, went further calling the drug’s approval “a grave error” that could derail the ongoing search for meaningful dementia treatments “for a decade”.

He said the FDA had ignored data from the trial which showed no slowing of decline in cognition or function.

However, Alzheimer’s Society said the drug was “promising” but added it was “just the beginning of the road to new treatments for Alzheimer’s disease”.

Full Report

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Date: 8/06/2021 15:27:22
From: SCIENCE
ID: 1748704
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

surely killing them all with SARS-CoV-2 before they get to that stage will be more economically viable

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Date: 8/06/2021 17:17:23
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1748753
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

> US regulators have approved a new drug for Alzheimer’s the first for 20 years, but the decision is being met with mixed reactions.

Yahoo, yippee, hooray, whooppee, hip-hip.

> This is the first treatment which tackles the destructive mechanism in the brain that drives the destruction of neurons. While some have welcomed approval, calling it a milestone for millions living with Alzheimer’s, others believe the drug will only have marginal benefits.

Get it out there now. Even if it has only marginal benefits, that still makes it better than those health-food placebos sold at every pharmacy.

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Date: 8/06/2021 17:19:06
From: SCIENCE
ID: 1748754
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

how about exercise

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Date: 8/06/2021 17:27:28
From: Cymek
ID: 1748766
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

mollwollfumble said:


> US regulators have approved a new drug for Alzheimer’s the first for 20 years, but the decision is being met with mixed reactions.

Yahoo, yippee, hooray, whooppee, hip-hip.

> This is the first treatment which tackles the destructive mechanism in the brain that drives the destruction of neurons. While some have welcomed approval, calling it a milestone for millions living with Alzheimer’s, others believe the drug will only have marginal benefits.

Get it out there now. Even if it has only marginal benefits, that still makes it better than those health-food placebos sold at every pharmacy.

Depends on the cost I imagine and if it takes money away from proven drugs to pay for it

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Date: 8/06/2021 17:27:42
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1748768
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

SCIENCE said:


how about exercise

Yeah, hire one of those sadists that call themselves physiotherapists. That’s a wonderful placebo.

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Date: 8/06/2021 20:42:03
From: poikilotherm
ID: 1748858
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

““. . .the totality of the data does not seem to support the efficacy of the high dose. . .the reviewer believes that there is no compelling substantial evidence of treatment effect or disease slowing, and that another study is needed. . .”

https://www.fda.gov/media/143502/download

Just as much a waste of time as a placebo, but much much more expensive.

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Date: 8/06/2021 20:45:39
From: SCIENCE
ID: 1748862
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

ah so good for the shareholders excellent

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Date: 8/06/2021 20:48:58
From: poikilotherm
ID: 1748866
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

https://www.statnews.com/2021/05/30/if-the-fda-approves-biogens-alzheimers-treatment-i-wont-prescribe-it/

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Date: 8/06/2021 20:50:13
From: poikilotherm
ID: 1748867
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

https://www.biocentury.com/article/636826/why-fda-and-biogen-should-be-unusually-transparent-with-aducanumab-data

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Date: 9/06/2021 05:00:51
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1748944
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

Dementia is the number one cause of death for Australian women.
The sooner this drug is available, the better.

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Date: 9/06/2021 07:22:48
From: poikilotherm
ID: 1748948
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

mollwollfumble said:


Dementia is the number one cause of death for Australian women.
The sooner this drug is available, the better.

It don’t work bro, they’ll still die with or without the drug.

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Date: 9/06/2021 07:27:53
From: Dark Orange
ID: 1748950
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

mollwollfumble said:


Dementia is the number one cause of death for Australian women.
The sooner this drug is available, the better.

Behind suicide.

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Date: 9/06/2021 07:29:44
From: poikilotherm
ID: 1748951
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

Dark Orange said:


mollwollfumble said:

Dementia is the number one cause of death for Australian women.
The sooner this drug is available, the better.

Behind suicide.

Nah, dementia and Alzheimer’s it is number one for 2018 according to ABS.

Reply Quote

Date: 9/06/2021 07:39:01
From: Dark Orange
ID: 1748952
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

poikilotherm said:


Dark Orange said:

mollwollfumble said:

Dementia is the number one cause of death for Australian women.
The sooner this drug is available, the better.

Behind suicide.

Nah, dementia and Alzheimer’s it is number one for 2018 according to ABS.

Hmm… you are right. Sorry, brane hasn’t woken up yet.

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Date: 9/06/2021 07:42:18
From: roughbarked
ID: 1748953
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

Anyway, we have established that the drug doesn’t cure death.

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Date: 12/06/2021 13:50:59
From: Witty Rejoinder
ID: 1750516
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

False positive
America’s approval of an Alzheimer’s drug is premature
It may offer false hope and divert resources from more promising therapies

Jun 12th 2021 edition

On june 7th America’s Food and Drug Administration (fda) approved the first new drug since 2003 to treat Alzheimer’s disease. The euphoric reaction in some quarters is understandable. A century of research has produced no effective treatment for Alzheimer’s, which is marked by ever-worsening cognitive decline, and accounts for 60-80% of cases of dementia, a condition affecting perhaps 50m people worldwide and becoming ever more common as the world ages.

But, sadly, the fda admits that it is not proven that the new drug, a monoclonal antibody to be sold under the name Aduhelm, actually works. The approval is misguided. It risks raising unrealistic expectations, wreaking financial harm on health-care systems, damaging the fda’s reputation for scientific impartiality and perhaps even diverting attention from more hopeful approaches to treating dementia.

It is also hard to understand. Last November ten of the 11 members of the fda’s own expert advisory panel voted to reject the application by the producer, Biogen of Cambridge, Massachusetts, for approval of the drug (the 11th was “uncertain”). The fda’s approval does not mean it accepts that the data so far show that Aduhelm is effective in slowing cognitive decline. Biogen’s trials were at best ambiguous on this point, and indeed in 2019 were called off as failures. Rather, the agency is rewarding the drug’s success in clearing brains of beta-amyloid, a protein that clumps between neurons and disrupts their functioning.

An “amyloid hypothesis” holds that the protein is not just a symptom of the disease, but a prime cause. This is widely believed (all brains with Alzheimer’s exhibit beta-amyloid build-ups). But it is just a hypothesis (not every brain with beta-amyloid exhibits cognitive impairment). The fda has demanded a further trial, even as the drug goes into use, and has warned it may pull the drug if it is unsatisfactory. Biogen has said that the trial may take nine years. And if the drug is in wide use, withdrawing it would be difficult.

At $56,000 a year, the cost of Aduhelm treatment will create huge problems for health insurers and providers. Certainly the stockmarket has rewarded Biogen’s shares in the belief that a new blockbuster drug has just been given clearance. It is recommended only for people in the early stages of Alzheimer’s, diagnosed by a costly pet scan, and will require a course of monthly intravenous administration at a medical facility. Patients will require close monitoring as many develop brain swellings. But given the lack of any alternative, millions of Americans will be clamouring for the treatment for loved ones with Alzheimer’s.

The fda’s approval also risks actually impeding some dementia research. Aduhelm might make it hard to recruit participants for clinical trials for new drugs, and to assess the results of them (if many patients are already taking the drug). And it may divert more resources into fresh efforts to validate the disputed amyloid hypothesis.

That the evidence argued against the approval of Aduhelm does not mean that research into treatments for dementia is going badly. On the contrary, whereas a few years ago some pharmaceutical firms were withdrawing from the field, having written it off as a dead end, some neurologists now expect big breakthroughs. A better understanding is emerging of how the risk of developing dementia can be reduced, by living a healthier life. The age-specific incidence of dementia is actually declining in some Western countries. Blood tests make it far easier to diagnose those at high risk before symptoms appear. And, according to Pharmaprojects, an industry database, another 148 drugs for Alzheimer’s alone are in clinical development, only about 15% of which are directed at beta-amyloid.

Dementia remains one of the 21st century’s greatest health, social and economic problems, and, for some neurologists, anything that stimulates greater efforts to understanding and treating it is welcome. That is why even some of those who have been baffled by the scientific basis of the fda’s aduhelm approval have applauded it. Surely, however, hope lies not in lowering standards out of desperation, but in following the science.

https://www.economist.com/leaders/2021/06/12/americas-approval-of-an-alzheimers-drug-is-premature?

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Date: 12/06/2021 14:50:14
From: SCIENCE
ID: 1750561
Subject: re: Controversy over new Alzheimer's drug

ah so we were right to be skeptical

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