The Citizen (Gauteng)

Forgetting about Alzheimer’s

MANY DISHEARTEN­ING BLOWS TO THE QUEST FOR A CURE

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The year 2018, barely under way, has already dealt a series of dishearten­ing blows to the quest for an Alzheimer’s cure. Within the first three weeks, pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer abandoned the costly and frustratin­g field of dementia drug developmen­t, and two promising treatments stumbled in patient trials.

Alzheimer’s support groups are putting on a brave face, but the collective disappoint­ment is palpable as the global cost of caring for some 50 million dementia sufferers is set to reach $1 trillion (about R12.2 trillion) this year.

“It’s very fair to say that progress is slow,” said David Reynolds, chief scientific officer at Alzheimer’s Research UK, a charity.

“Companies have put a lot of time, effort and money in over the last 25 years, and there haven’t been any new medicines launched in this area for 16 years now.”

Experts say it takes 12 to 15 years, on average, and more than $2 billion to develop a single drug.

According to the Alzforum website, which gathers data on candidate drugs, fewer than 300 have made it to Phase II drug efficiency trials so far.

Only five have ever been approved to treat symptoms such as memory loss associated with Alzheimer’s, first identified more than 100 years ago.

With a clinical trial failure rate of over 99%, there is still no licenced drug that slows the condition’s progressio­n, or cures it.

Today, about 100 candidate dementia drugs are enrolled in trials, compared to over 1 000 for cancer, according to Reynolds.

One reason is that “pharmaceut­ical companies ultimately are companies. They are beholden to their investors,” he said.

“A return on investment is how much time and money do you put into getting a new medicine versus how much money can you make once you’ve actually got it? In this area, success has been very difficult to come by.” The stakes are high. According to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), some 10 million people per year are diagnosed with dementia, with Alzheimer’s disease accounting for about two-thirds of cases.

By 2030, the number of sufferers is projected to reach 82 million globally, and by 2050 some 152 million.

The medical, patient-care, and economic costs are enormous.

A heavy burden falls on family members, the majority of care providers worldwide. Many have to give up their jobs.

Alzheimer’s affects mainly older people – about one in four over-85s is a sufferer. And numbers have soared as lifespans have lengthened thanks to medical advances in other fields.

With cardiovasc­ular disease and cancer the biggest killers in the 1960s and 1970s, that is where most of the research money went.

“In dementia, that investment wasn’t there. So the amount of knowledge ... about the disease is at a much, much earlier stage, and arguably the brain is a much more complicate­d organ than the heart,” said Reynolds.

To this day, scientists don’t know exactly what causes Alzheimer’s, leaving drug developers stumped.

On January 6, Pfizer announced an end to its “discovery and early developmen­t efforts” for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s dementia drugs.

Two days later, Danish company Lundbeck reported its idalopirdi­ne compound did not “decrease cognitive loss” in patients, and on January 12, biotech firm Axovant announced the end of the road for its offering, intepirdin­e.

Experts say every failure of a drug reveals something new about Alzheimer’s disease, which is thought to be associated with a buildup of protein “plaques”, and “tangles” in the brain.

One important recent realisatio­n was that an effective treatment may have to begin long before symptoms appear as protein build-up likely starts decades before disease sets in.

This, in itself, presents a research challenge.

“How do you find these patients?” when they are in middle age and symptom-free, asked French neurology professor Bruno Dubois. “How long do you treat them?”

Drugs in developmen­t today are targeting several tracks.

Some use antibodies to mop up proteins in circulatio­n, or enzymes to inhibit their production.

Another experiment­al approach is vaccinatio­n: training the body to produce its own antibodies to attack disease-causing proteins.

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