The Guardian (USA)

What impact will Alzheimer’s drug donanemab have?

- Ian Sample Science editor

A major clinical trial of an Alzheimer’s drug has confirmed that the therapy can slow the rate at which patients deteriorat­e, raising hopes that medicine may one day halt the most common form of dementia. What impact could the new drug have?

What is the new drug?

Donanemab is an antibody therapy from the US pharmaceut­ical giant Eli Lilly. It targets abnormal clumps of a protein called beta-amyloid that can build up in the brain. The plaques are considered one of the pathologic­al hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease. The drug works by binding to the abnormal amyloid and removing it from the brain.

How does it help patients?

The drug works rapidly and can clear nearly 90% of amyloid plaque from the brain, according to data from a clinical trial released on Monday. Removing the toxic protein early enough seems to reduce the damage caused to the brain and slow the rate of cognitive decline.

How effective is the drug?

Donanemab is not a cure. Patients on the drug did not improve, and the treatment did not halt their decline, but they deteriorat­ed more slowly than a control group that received a placebo. After decades of failed trials – and billions of dollars invested in research – proof that drugs can alter the course of the disease is regarded as a significan­t triumph. On average, the drug slowed the progressio­n of the disease by 20-30%, amounting to about four to seven months over the course of the 18month trial. Though modest, this could mean patients have more time to live independen­tly before requiring care.

How is the drug given?

Donanemab is administer­ed as an intravenou­s infusion once every four weeks. Patients need to have regular brain scans to monitor for potential side-effects, including brain swelling and bleeding. These mostly resolve on their own but in rare cases can be fatal.

Who is most likely to benefit?

Those who benefited most from the drug were in the earliest stages of disease and notably had low levels of another toxic protein called tau in their brains. Amyloid protein builds up between brain cells, but when the plaque reaches a certain level it seems to aid the formation of tau tangles inside neurons, driving more severe brain damage. The trial results suggest it is important to remove amyloid before tau spreads.

Are there similar drugs out there?

Yes. Donanemab works in the same way as lecanemab, an amyloid-targeting antibody therapy from Eisai, a Japanese pharmaceut­ical company. Earlier this year, the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) gave accelerate­d approval to lecanemab. European and UK regulators are still reviewing the drug. A third drug called aducanumab was approved by the FDA in 2021, but concerns over cost and effectiven­ess mean it is rarely used.

Will the drugs cure dementia?

No. These amyloid-targeting drugs are the first generation of therapies that directly affect the progressio­n of Alz

heimer’s. And while that is a breakthrou­gh, the effects are modest. Many scientists believe that patients will need a cocktail of drugs to halt cognitive decline, with each working on a different part of the disease process.

What are the risks?

There are significan­t side-effects with donanemab and they are similar to those seen with lecanemab. In the Eli

Lilly trial, nearly a quarter of patients treated experience­d some level of brain swelling or bleeding, compared with only 2% in the control group, though serious problems were rare. Four people died while taking part in the trial – three in the donanemab group and one in the control group.

 ?? Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters ?? Evidence of Alzheimer’s disease on PET scans.
Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters Evidence of Alzheimer’s disease on PET scans.

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