San Francisco Chronicle

Another Alzheimer’s drug failure

- By Phil Serafino Phil Serafino is a Bloomberg writer. Email: pserafino@bloomberg.net

Eli Lilly and Astra Zeneca ended two late-stage trials of an experiment­al drug for Alzheimer’s disease after the treatment failed to show any signs of working, adding to a litany of disappoint­ments for the memory robbing illness.

An independen­t data monitoring committee found that the medicine, lanabecest­at, was unlikely to meet the goals of the studies, one for early Alzheimer’s and the other for mild dementia related to the disease, the companies said Tuesday. There were no safety concerns, they said.

Like several others that failed, such as Merck’s verubecest­at, the drug targeted a protein called amyloid, thought to be a cause of the disease. The class of medicines known as BACE inhibitors operate before the amyloid has formed into deposits, called plaques. Many researcher­s now believe that administer­ing drugs after amyloid has built up in the brain may come too late to affect Alzheimer’s progress.

“The complexity of Alzheimer’s disease poses one of the most difficult medical challenges of our time, and we are deeply disappoint­ed for the millions suffering from this devastatin­g disease,” Daniel Skovronsky, president of Lilly Research Labs, said in a statement.

The decision to end the trials won’t have a material financial impact on Astra Zeneca, and its forcast for this year remains unchanged, the Cambridge, England, company said. Lilly doesn’t anticipate significan­t costs associated with the end of the studies and reaffirmed its outlook for 2018 and the remainder of the decade.

By one count, more than 190 Alzheimer drugs have failed in trials. Spending on care for people alive in the U.S. right now who will develop the affliction is projected to cost $47 trillion over the course of their lives, according to a report in March from the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n. The U.S. is projected to spend $277 billion on Alzheimer’s or other dementia care in 2018 alone, with an aging cohort of Baby Boomers pushing that number to $1.1 trillion by 2050.

Despite billions of dollars spent by the drug industry searching for a treatment, there are no medicines that slow the progress of Alzheimer’s. The failures have left analysts pessimisti­c about many of the experiment­al medicines that companies are working on. Roger Franklin of Liberum Capital said he, like most analysts, had forecast no revenue from lanabecest­at for Astra Zeneca.

“This is absolutely no surprise to us given failures by others with this so-called BACE inhibitor mechanism and the track record of late-stage Alzheimer’s studies more generally,” he wrote in a report Tuesday.

A new approach centers on targeting the protein tau, another degenerati­ve process identified in the brain of Alzheimer’s patients. Tau protein forms into tangles, which start in the areas of the brain important for memory. Lilly, Merck, AbbVie Inc., Biogen Inc. and Roche Holding AG are among the drugmakers pursuing that route.

Lilly stock closed at $85.49 per share, down less than 1 percent. AstraZenec­a shares fell less than 1 percent in London.

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