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Lilly drug slows Alzheimer's progression by 35% in trial
Experimental Alzheimer’s drug made by Elli Lily slows cognitive decline by 35% and FDA will look to approve it this summer
An experimental Alzheimer’s drug developed by Eli Lilly slows cognitive decline by more than a third, the company has said.
Donanemab slowed down patients’ ability to think clearly and perform daily tasks by 35 percent compared to a placebo.
The medicine works by clearing plaque clusters in the brain known as amyloid, synonymous with Alzheimer’s disease.
The results raise hopes it could become the second approved Alzheimer’s drug – after decades without an effective treatment.
An experimental Alzheimer’s drug developed by Eli Lilly slows cognitive decline by more than a third, the company has said
Last year a drug made by Eisai and Biogen – which works the same way – reduced the rate of cognitive decline by 27 percent compared with a placebo in patients with early Alzheimer’s.
Lilly said it plans to file for approval from the US Food and Drug Administration by the end of June.
However, the drug does appear to come with severe side effects. Three people in the 1,700-participant trial died while taking the drug over the course of 18 months, two of which were linked to adverse events such as brain swelling or microhemorrhages.
But donanemab met all primary and secondary goals of the trial. It slowed the progression of Alzheimer’s by 35% to 36% compared to a placebo in 1,182 people diagnosed with early-stage disease based on scans showing brain deposits of a protein called amyloid and intermediate levels of a second protein known as tau, Lilly said. The trial’s other 552 patients had high levels of tau, suggesting they would be less likely to respond to treatment.
After combining both groups, donanemab was shown to slow progression of Alzheimer’s by 22% using a Lilly-developed scale to measure cognition and activities of daily living, and by 29% based on a more commonly-used scale of dementia progression.
In the donanemab treatment group, Lilly said brain swelling, a known side effect of drugs of this type, occurred in 24% of participants, with 6.1% experiencing symptoms. Brain bleeding occurred in 31.4% of the donanemab group and 13.6% of the placebo group.
In the Leqembi Phase 3 trial, the drug was associated with brain swelling in nearly 13% of patients.
Lilly said the incidence of serious brain swelling in the donanemab study was 1.6%, including two participants whose deaths were attributed to the condition and third who died after an incident of serious brain swelling.
Dr. Eric Reiman, executive director of the Banner Alzheimer’s Institute, which is running an Alzheimer’s prevention study of donanemab in presymptomatic patients, said he was “very excited” about the findings. “Clearly, one saw benefits here, but there is some risk that needs to be considered,” he said.
The company said it plans to file for traditional U.S. approval by the end of June and with regulators from other countries shortly thereafter.
“There are risks in medicine, but I think when you look at these results in the context of a fatal life-threatening disease, these results are quite meaningful,” said Lilly Neuroscience executive Anne White in an interview with Reuters.
Study participants received a monthly intravenous infusion of donanemab. When follow-up brain scans showed the amyloid had been removed, treatment stopped and volunteers were moved to the placebo-arm of the study. Half of trial participants had no evidence of amyloid plaques at 12 months, the company said.
The company also said 47% of donanemab patients in the 18-month trial had no disease progression at 12 months, compared with 29% of the placebo group.
Lilly’s drug is likely to become the third in its class on the market following U.S. approval of two similar medicines developed by partners Eisai and Biogen – Leqembi and Aduhelm, which failed to gain traction with doctors or insurers after showing little evidence that it slowed cognitive decline.
Both were approved under the FDA’s accelerated review program, based on their ability remove amyloid plaques.
Leqembi is currently undergoing the FDA’s standard review process, which will weigh its impact on cognitive function, with a decision due by July 6. More than 6 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s, and the number is projected to rise to nearly 13 million by 2050, according to the Alzheimer’s Association.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago and Deena Beasley in Los Angeles; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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