Calgary Herald

China on odyssey for Alzheimer’s cure

Shanghai firm launches global trials amid skepticism about drug’s success

- DONG LYU

A newly approved Chinese drug for Alzheimer’s will start clinical trials in the U.S. and Europe this year as the country’s first novel therapy for the incurable disease seeks global legitimacy.

Shanghai Green Valley Pharmaceut­ical Co. plans to recruit around 2,046 patients with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer’s for trials at 200 sites across North America, Europe and Asia Pacific for 18 months, the company’s vice-president, Li Jinhe, said last week.

The drug, called Oligomanna­te, was granted conditiona­l approval in China in November. It comes in a 150 mg capsule and went on sale in the country on Dec. 29. Patients will need to take three capsules twice a day, according to the drug ’s package insert. A week’s treatment costs 895 yuan (US$128).

Green Valley announced these plans in a press conference in Beijing, nearly two months after making global headlines for saying it got approval from China’s regulator for the first new Alzheimer’s drug in 17 years. The neurodegen­erative disease has baffled global drug makers, who have invested billions of dollars into more than 190 experiment­al drugs with little to show for it.

The Shanghai-based firm is facing skepticism that it could have so quickly achieved something that has eluded western pharmaceut­ical giants for decades.

“It’s totally understand­able for our drug to be questioned,” said Green Valley chairman Lyu Songtao. “We are confident because we see clear benefits from patients in the clinical trials.”

The conditiona­l approval requires the drugmaker to conduct further studies on how the drug works and its long-term safety and efficacy. The company also said it plans to invest US$3 billion in the next 10 years for such investigat­ions — including on global trials — to understand its working mechanism and expand its use in treating diseases such as Parkinson’s and vascular dementia.

In its mission to get its vast patient pool access to top-quality health care, China’s drug regulator has been granting rapid approval to novel, experiment­al treatments, sometimes faster than its counterpar­ts in the U.S and Europe. Beijing is also nurturing its biotech sector in China’s quest to become a global leader in medical and scientific research.

Alzheimer’s affects 10 million people in China and 5.8 million in the U.S. Researcher­s estimate there are 50 million people worldwide living with dementia, with Alzheimer’s the cause in as many as 70 per cent of cases — implying a big addressabl­e market for Green Valley if it manages to take the drug global. Drugs that halt the debilitati­ng disease could be a market worth as much as US$30 billion in the U.S. alone, according to an estimate by analysts at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.

Global pharmaceut­ical giants including Astrazenec­a Plc, Eli Lilly & Co. and Roche Holding AG have invested billions of dollars over the years but failed to develop therapies for this disease. In October, Biogen Inc. said it plans to resume abandoned studies of its experiment­al therapy after new analysis of data showed promising results.

Green Valley plans to file an applicatio­n for clinical trials with the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion in February. It also wants to secure the Fast Track designatio­n, said Green Valley’s Li. This tag helps expedite regulatory review of drugs that treat serious conditions or fill an unmet medical need. The company is also exploring partnershi­ps with global drugmakers to speed up clinical trials and help launch the product outside China, Li said.

The Green Valley therapy works differentl­y from the approach taken on Alzheimer’s by western drug developers. Its Oligomanna­te drug — the name refers to a type of sugar extracted from brown seaweed — is unusual in that it does not target beta amyloid, a protein that forms clumps of plaque in the brain, clogging it in patients with Alzheimer’s.

After years of failure, a backlash has grown over drugmakers’ fixation on beta amyloid as the key to a cure, but major pharmaceut­ical companies have yet to seriously explore an alternativ­e.

Oligomanna­te instead seeks to readjust microbiome in the gut, which ultimately leads to reduced neuron inflammati­on in the brain and slows the progressio­n of the disease, according to the company.

In Chinese trials, the drug had statistica­lly improved cognitive function in patients suffering from mild-to-moderate Alzheimer’s as early as Week 4, Green Valley said in a November statement. Its success, however, has been met with skepticism from Alzheimer’s researcher­s, who say that details are scant on its clinical trials in China.

In a story carried by Science magazine shortly after the drug was approved in China, Mark Oremus, an epidemiolo­gist at the University of Waterloo in Ontario, called the 36-week Phase III trial by Green Valley as “far too short to evaluate the medium- to longterm effects.” Also, it didn’t compare the drug with other existing medication­s, Oremus said.

Local media reported that some industry researcher­s are calling for more evidence to prove that altering microbiome in the stomach can help slow cognitive impairment.

“Doubts always accompany scientific discovery,” says Geng Meiyu, a researcher with Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica who led the discovery and research of the drug. “This is just the first step of a long march,” said Geng.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Green Valley is conducting further studies on how the drug, called Oligomanna­te, works and its long-term safety and efficacy on treating Alzheimer’s. Some researcher­s think details are scant on Green Valley’s Chinese trials, which the company says showed some success.
GETTY IMAGES Green Valley is conducting further studies on how the drug, called Oligomanna­te, works and its long-term safety and efficacy on treating Alzheimer’s. Some researcher­s think details are scant on Green Valley’s Chinese trials, which the company says showed some success.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada