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    FDA outlines path to test Alzheimer's drugs earlier

    CHICAGO (Reuters) - Proposed U.S. guidelines may make it easier for drug companies to test Alzheimer's treatments in people at an earlier stage, when scientists think they may have the best shot at working.

    The draft guidance document, issued on Thursday by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, reflects changes in scientists' understanding of Alzheimer's. They now believe the disease begins at least a decade before symptoms appear.

    "The scientific community and the FDA believe that it is critical to identify and study patients with very early Alzheimer's disease before there is too much irreversible injury to the brain," said Dr. Russell Katz, director of the Division of Neurology Products in the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

    Current Alzheimer's drugs treat symptoms, but none has been proven to interrupt the steady destructive course of Alzheimer's that robs sufferers of their memories and independence.

    "I think this will be hugely useful to the pharmaceutical industry," said Dr. Paul Aisen of the University of California, San Diego, and director of the Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study, a joint effort between the university and the National Institute on Aging focused on identifying the earliest signs of Alzheimer's.

    Aisen said the draft document will help companies design clinical trials to test drugs in people before dementia strikes, such as prodromal disease, a precursor to Alzheimer's in which mild cognitive changes have occurred and there is some biomarker evidence, such as a brain scan, that suggests the changes are related to Alzheimer's disease.

    The need for new treatments is great and growing. A study on Wednesday suggested that the number of Americans with Alzheimer's disease would triple to 13.8 million by 2050.

    Drug companies have been working for years to develop so-called disease-modifying drugs, but so far, with little success.

    Last summer, a promising drug called bapineuzumab being developed by Johnson & Johnson , Pfizer and Elan, failed to show a benefit in large trials of patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's.

    And a drug by Eli Lilly and Co known as solanezumab also failed to meet the main goals of two large trials in this same population. But the drug did appear to show a slight benefit in mild patients when results of both studies were pooled.

    Researchers now plan to study Lilly's drug in patients with earlier-stage disease, including a trial known as the "A4" prevention study, which will study 1,000 volunteers aged 70 to 85 with pre-symptomatic disease, who have not yet developed significant memory problems.

    The trial will be managed by the Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study under Aisen's direction.

    Several other so-called prevention studies are testing drugs in people who are genetically predisposed to develop Alzheimer's at an early age. In one study, members of a large family in Colombia will test a drug from Roche Holding AG's Genentech unit known as crenezumab.

    Maria Carrillo of the Alzheimer's Association, which has worked with the National Institute on Aging to develop new guidelines for identifying Alzheimer's at an earlier stage, said the proposed changes "open the door wider for those of us working on and thinking about prevention trials."

    The FDA said the move is part of the government's efforts to respond to Alzheimer's as part of the National Alzheimer's Plan signed by President Obama last year. The plan aims to find an effective way to prevent or treat Alzheimer's by 2025.

    The draft document can be found at:

    http://www.fda.gov/downloads/Drugs/GuidanceComplianceRegulatoryInformation/Guidances/UCM338287.pdf

    (Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Jilian Mincer and David Gregorio)

    13 comments

    • KODIAK57  •  2 days 6 hrs ago
      Ned, also with cancer. Just think of the billions and billions of dollars that would be lost if they found a cure for cancer and how many people would be put out of a job. Very sad but true.
      • Surferchick777 2 days 1 hr ago
        There isn't a cure for cancer, it's a disease that arises from fungus in the blood, you can "cure" it all you want, it will come back if the conditions in the body don't change i.e. with an alkaline diet. What really angers me is how little is being done to try and prevent these diseases. MikeyPooh, FYI, chemo is already around $20,000 per treatment, how much more do you think people can afford? My friend had 5 of them and her out of pocket bankrupted her, and she died anyway.
    • Surferchick777  •  2 days 1 hr ago
      It's all about the drugs. How about figuring out what the he** is causing this hideous disease? My mother got it in her 50s and is now in the advanced stages. She was a victim of a lot of medical interventions, i.e. high blood pressure and thyroid pills from her 30s, a total hysterectomy in her early 40s and hormone replacement therapy for many years, then she ends up with this. I blame the doctors/procedures and meds for this. You look at 3rd world countries where people eat whole foods, even if lacking in nutrients, and have little access to medical "care" and they have EXTREMELY low rates of this disease, while 1st world countries like the U.S. and England have so much higher rates. But rest assured they won't bother trying to PREVENT this disease, there would be no $$$$ in that!
    • Sarah  •  21 hrs ago
      I hope that the outcome of such change is actual benefit to the public, rather than solely income for the companies.
    • leslie  •  21 hrs ago
      This translates to drug companies pushing doctors to eventually use drugs not for alzheimer's patients but for POTENTIAL alzheimer's patients. Another words lets medicate healthy people with poisonous drugs to help prevent a disease. Drugs don't CURE disease; drugs (at best) only treat symptoms of diseases while the cause of the disease remains.
      If you want to shorten your life for example; take statin drugs. Google Dr. Brownstein in MI, or Dr. Blaylock on youtube. He is a neurosurgeon and he is not afraid to tell it like it really is which is that the drug companies control the medical system in this country and docs as well as people are very brainwashed about the benefits of drugs. No thank you docs, don't want your drugs or your poisonous vaccinations either. I believe in free choice. I get to decide not the govt or drug companies what gets injected into MY veins.
    • michael  •  22 hrs ago
      The main reason for no cure is the government paper work just destroys research. In California as one example, a neurosurgeon tested in four patients a new possible cure for brain cancer, three died. Since they were dieing anyway they and their families said go ahead. what did the government do, fired the doctor and are trying to run him out of business. The government should never be in the business of saying no or yes on the testing, only in disclosure to the patients of the possible risks.
    • killer  •  2 days 5 hrs ago
      It is fascinating to watch how the FDA "fast-tracks" some drug testing and delays others. They always seem to come out on the side of the largest pharmaceutical companies regardless of disease or need.
    • The Captain  •  2 days 3 hrs ago
      Sadly, the FDA has become virtually useless in the protection of the public from hazardous drugs.Over 100,000 people die from FDA approved drugs WHEN TAKEN AS DIRECTED. If this drug was another "miracle cure" like a dozen or so over the last few years, I wouldn't take it until a MILLION of other human Guenna pigs have swallowed the pill for a year! Most of the side effects are hidden in drug ads that promote "significant" (but negligible) results.
    • Ned  •  2 days 8 hrs ago
      there will never be a cure for Altzheimers, the drug companies would not allow it. Same as with Aids. The Aids cocktail is the perfect drug. Expensive and if you don't take it you die. They want something on this model. Curing Altzheimers would not be cost effective for the drug companies.
    • KC Drummer  •  2 days 10 hrs ago
      Proposed U.S. guidelines may make it easier for drug companies to test Alzheimer's treatments in people at an earlier stage, when scientists think they may have the best shot at working.

      Working for what? - Scientists working for the pharmaceutical companies paying more money to the FDA to get their drugs to market faster?
    • Jesus  •  1 day 13 hrs ago
      Have you noticed that there's a sudden increase on articles about drugs here? Have you also noticed that there's a sudden increase in ads from drug companies?
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