Two-part trial to build on landmark Colombian prevention study of people at near-certain genetic risk for early-onset Alzheimer's disease
A new Alzheimer's prevention study has received a $74.5 million five-year grant from the National Institute on Aging, part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The two-part study will be conducted in members of the world's largest autosomal dominant Alzheimer's disease (ADAD) kindred in Colombia who carry a genetic mutation that makes them all but destined to develop Alzheimer's and become cognitively impaired at an average age of 44.
The study is led by Banner Alzheimer's Institute in Phoenix and the Neurosciences Group at the University of Antioquia (GNA) in Medellin, Colombia. It will initially aim to remove amyloid plaques as completely as possible in cognitively impaired and unimpaired carriers of the presenilin 1 (PSEN1) E280A mutation, and then evaluate different ways to stave off the recurrence of plaque deposits and other ensuing elements of the disease. Enrollment is expected to begin in the fall of 2025.
The first part of the study will use Eli Lillyand Company's (Lilly) antibody therapy donanemab to remove existing plaques as completely as possible (i.e., to levels consistent with a negativeamyloid PET scan). Donanemab has been shown to clear amyloid plaques and slow cognitive decline, and was recently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for use in patients with mild cognitive impairment and dementia due to Alzheimer's. The study will provide new information about the drug's safety, tolerability, and biological efficacy in the unimpaired and impaired stages of ADAD.
The second part of the study will compare the following approaches in the same participants, for safety, tolerability and ability to avert amyloid plaqueaccumulation and other biological and clinical features of the disease:
— Mutation carriers who will continue to receivedonanemab infusions, as in the study's first part;
— Those who will receive RG6289,Roche's investigational gamma secretase modulator, an orally administered drug intended to limit the production of amyloid protein that is prone to aggregate in Alzheimer's disease;
— Those who will receive a combination of these two drug treatments; and
— Those who will be followed on placebo.
This study builds on the history, partnership, infrastructure and learnings of the original API ADAD Colombia Trial, which launched a new era in Alzheimer's prevention research when it was announced by NIH in 2012.
While the investigational drug in the original trial with crenezumab failed to clear plaques or demonstrate a clinical benefit, the study introduced paradigms to speed up the evaluation of promising prevention therapies, found ways to do so in a vulnerable population in a developing country, and led to a growing number of prevention trials, some of which may find the first effective Alzheimer's prevention therapies within the next few years. Both the original and the new trial tap into GNA's identification of about 6,000 distant relatives from the Colombian PSEN1 E280A kindred, including about 1,200 who carry the ADAD-causing genetic mutation.
“We are excited about the chance to advance the fight against Alzheimer's disease in partnership with our outstanding colleagues and these unique families in Colombia,” said Robert Alexander, MD, the API's chief scientific officer and one of the prevention trial leaders. “This study will clarify the extent to which the antibody treatment reduces amyloid plaques in the unimpaired and impaired stages of ADAD and test different approaches to maintain low amyloid levels following plaque removal.”
The new study will enroll 200 cognitively unimpaired and mildly impaired mutation carriers and 40 non-carriers (who will receive placebo) from the Colombian kindred.
“This trial is a testament to our dear friend and longstanding partner, Dr. Francisco Lopera, who established GNA, forged a close working relationship with API, and could not have been more committed to these families,” saidEric M. Reiman, MD, executive director of Banner Alzheimer's Institute and one of the other API leaders. “He constantly said, 'My families are waiting,' and he played indispensable roles in the effort to find effective prevention therapies.”
“I am honored to follow in Dr. Lopera's footsteps and continue our work with API,” said David Aguillón, MD, GNA's new director and principal investigator of the University of Antioquia study site. “Dr. Lopera and the Antioquia families have inspired all of us to never give up, to maintain our sense of urgency to find effective Alzheimer's prevention therapies, and to do so in ways that will help our Antioquia families.”
The research study is supported by grant R01AG086363 from the NIH National Institute on Aging, the lead U.S. federal agency supporting and conducting Alzheimer's disease and related dementias research. Lilly and Roche are generously donating the drug supplies that will be evaluated in this study. The study is led by Drs. Robert Alexander, Eric Reiman and Jessica Langbaum from BAI and its API; David Aguillón from the University of Antioquia; and Yakeel Quiroz from the University of Antioquia and Massachusetts General Hospital.
API also received a $3 million grant from the Zurich-based NOMIS Foundation to continue to assess about 2,000 mutation carriers and non-carriers from the PSEN1 E280A kindred, provide a shared resource of longitudinal data and blood samples for the field, accelerate enrollment in the new prevention trial, and provide education and social support for the families irrespective of their participation in the study.
About Banner Alzheimer's InstituteSince its inception in 2006, Banner Alzheimer's Institute has sought to find effective Alzheimer's disease prevention therapies within twenty years, establish a new model of care for cognitively impaired patients and family caregivers, and forge new models of collaboration in biomedical research. It has made groundbreaking contributions to the unusually early detection, tracking, diagnosis, study and prevention of Alzheimer's disease. It includes the pioneering Alzheimer's Prevention Initiative, an extensive profile of research studies and clinical trials, comprehensive clinical, family and community service programs, leading brain imaging and blood-based biomarker research programs, and strategic partnerships with public and private research organizations around the world. Learn more at www.bannerhealth.com/Alzheimers.
About the Alzheimer's Prevention InitiativeThe Alzheimer's Prevention Initiative (API) is an international collaborative formed in 2009 to launch a new era of Alzheimer's prevention research. Led by Banner Alzheimer's Institute, the API conducts prevention trials in cognitively healthy people at increased risk for Alzheimer's disease. API continues to establish brain imaging, fluid biomarker and cognitive endpoints needed to rapidly test promising prevention therapies. It also leads participant recruitment registries to accelerate enrollment into Alzheimer's-focused studies. API is intended to provide the scientific means, accelerated approval pathway and enrollment resources needed to evaluate the range of promising Alzheimer's prevention therapies and find ones that work without losing another generation. For more information, go to alzheimerspreventioninitiative.com.
About Grupo de Neurociencias de AntioquiaGrupo de Neurociencias de Antioquia (GNA), at the University of Antioquia in Medellín, is ranked as one of the best research organizations in Colombia. For more than three decades, GNA has characterized what is now considered the world's largest population with early-onset familial Alzheimer's disease, and it continues to play pioneering roles in the effort to find effective Alzheimer's prevention therapies. GNA has also characterized large and paradigmatic populations with other forms of dementia and other neurogenetic disorders.
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SOURCE Banner Alzheimer's Institute
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