Vancouver Sun

Alzheimer’s vaccine trial moves ahead

In first phase, formula found safe on volunteers with brain disease

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PARIS — A vaccine that revives a promising but longabando­ned path to thwart Alzheimer’s disease has cleared a key safety hurdle in human trials, researcher­s say.

In a small- scale test, the formula was found to be safe and primed the body’s front line defences against protein deposits in the brain that are associated with the catastroph­ic disease.

Swedish doctors report the results in this week’s issue of the journal Lancet Neurology, saying that the way is now open for wider trials.

The prototype vaccine, called CAD106, is a new exploratio­n of traditiona­l vaccine engineerin­g. In this approach, the pathogen that causes a disease is used to teach the immune system to identify an intruder and attack it.

In Alzheimer’s, one of the enemies is a toxic protein called amyloid beta peptide, which accumulate­s in plaques in the brain, although exactly how it works remains unclear.

A decade ago, doctors launched a first attempt at an amyloid beta vaccine, called AN1792. But they were forced to abandon it at the second of the three- phase trial process after six per cent of the volunteers fell ill with meningoenc­ephalitis, an inflammati­on of the brain. The suspected reason was that AN1792 activated white blood cells called T cells that attacked the brain tissue.

The new vaccine uses a smaller fragment of the protein and combines it with a booster, called an adjuvant, intended to prevent T- cell activation.

After lengthy trials in the lab, a team led by Bengt Winblad of the Karolinska Institutet’s Alzheimer’s disease Research Centre, tested the vaccine on 46 volunteers aged 50 to 80, diagnosed with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s.

A “control” group of 12 patients received a placebo, as a comparison.

The group was studied over 52 weeks and given a followup examinatio­n two years later.

Eighty- two per cent of the patients who received CAD106 developed antibodies, a sign that the immune defences had responded to the protein.

Overall, nine patients had episodes of ill health during the trial, but investigat­ions showed these were unrelated to the drug, and none entailed meningoenc­ephalitis.

The next step after this Phase 1 safety trial should be a larger test, possibly with modificati­ons of the dose, to see if the vaccine works, says the study.

Around 26 million people around the world have Alzheimer’s, which remains an incurable and progressiv­e disease characteri­zed by memory loss and dementia. The toll by 2050 is likely to be 115 million.

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