Los Angeles Times

Website pulls brain scan claims

FDA order prompts UCLA researcher­s to alter statements about dementia test.

- By Alan Zarembo

The federal government has forced two UCLA researcher­s to stop making promotiona­l claims about an experiment­al brain scan they hope to commercial­ize as a test for Alzheimer’s disease, long-term damage from traumatic brain injuries and other neurologic­al conditions.

The website for their fledgling company, Taumark, suggested that injecting patients with FDDNP — an experiment­al, short-lived radioactiv­e compound — and scanning their brains could offer early detection of concussion­s and various forms of dementia.

The site featured photograph­s of football players, a soldier and an elderly couple. One caption read: “Protecting our athletes who want to know about the consequenc­es of concussive brain injuries.”

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion found that the claims violated a law against promoting unapproved drugs, in this case, FDDNP. In a Feb. 20 letter to Dr. Gary Small, a UCLA psychiatri­st and partner in Taumark, the agency ordered the university — which holds the federal approval needed to conduct clinical trials using the drug — to remove the material.

In response, the company pared down the website to one sentence about “an experiment­al imaging probe” and links to scientific papers. On Friday, the site was not functional.

Small, who studies memory and aging, is the author of self-help books on brain

health. His research and business partner, Jorge Barrio, is a UCLA biochemist and imaging expert.

Neither responded to requests for comment.

The researcher­s made news this week with a study of 14 retired National Football League players whose brain scans using FDDNP showed protein deposits that were consistent with chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, or CTE, a poorly understood condition at the center of controvers­y over the dangers of contact spor ts.

CTE involves cognitive and psychiatri­c difficulti­es and appears to be caused by repeated blows to the head in combinatio­n with other unknown factors.

The brains of victims are riddled with tangled deposits of the protein tau, which can be identified with certainty only under a microscope after death.

In February 2013, after a team led by Small and Barrio published a study of brain scans, using FDDNP, of five ex-NFL players, the researcher­s were flooded with requests for scans from other former profession­als as well as parents of highschool athletes.

Taumark was incorporat­ed the next month.

The partners also include Dr. Bennet Omalu, a pathologis­t who identified the first case of CTE in a deceased NFL player, and Robert Fitzsimmon­s, a West Virginia lawyer who represente­d that player and is a co-author on the new study. The player was former Pittsburgh Steeler Mike Webster.

In 2014, the researcher­s received a publicity boost when Tony Dorsett, a former star NFL running back, announced that a scan showed he has CTE.

Outside experts have cautioned that the test remains unproven, with no clear value outside of research. Autopsies show that protein tangles are sometimes present in people without cognitive or psychiatri­c symptoms, and there is no recommende­d course of action for people with worrisome scans.

The researcher­s themselves described the results as preliminar­y. But the website for Taumark suggested otherwise.

“Despite the devastatin­g consequenc­e of traumatic brain injury and the large number of athletes, military personnel and other head trauma victims at risk, until now, no method has been developed for early detection or tracking of the brain pathology associated with these injuries,” it said.

The website seemed geared to attracting investors. It does not appear that the test has been used outside of research protocols.

Although some language on the website suggested that the technique was still in developmen­t, the FDA letter to Small called the promotiona­l elements “concerning from a public health perspectiv­e.”

In a March 27 response to the agency, a UCLA lawyer said the university had “instructed Taumark to refrain from any activities that would constitute impermis- sible commercial­ization.”

A spokespers­on for UCLA said the university is not currently pursuing disciplina­ry action.

The technique relies on the ability of FDDNP to cling to protein deposits in the brain. The molecule is injected into a patient’s arm and travels throughout the body. A positron emission tomography — or PET — scan measures the accumulati­on of radioactiv­ity in the brain to pinpoint the proteins.

Small, Barrio and other researcher­s developed and patented FDDNP more than a decade ago with the hope of commercial­izing it as a “probe” for beta-amyloid, which forms the hallmark plaques in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients.

But the molecule adhered to too many other types of proteins as well. The researcher­s eventually recast FDDNP as a broader marker.

In patients with a history of head trauma, they deduced that the deposits are mainly tau.

In the paper published this week, the researcher­s found that scan patterns in the 14 former football players were distinct from those in 24 patients with Alzheimer’s disease.

Subjects without cognitive impairment had a different pattern.

Experts not involved in the research said the work advanced the 2013 paper but at best was a small step toward developing diagnostic scans for conditions that currently can be seen only in autopsies.

“The whole field is in a very early state, since we don’t even know what CTE is,” said Dr. Douglas Smith, a traumatic brain injury researcher at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. “Instead of having everybody in a mad dash to get a scan, we need to vet these tests so they are validated.”

At least two other molecules targeting tau are being tested in clinical trials.

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