The Mail on Sunday

Dementia jab may soon be offered at home

- By Ethan Ennals

A BREAKTHROU­GH Alzheimer’s drug that is capable of slowing the disease’s progressio­n could potentiall­y be taken at home rather than hospital.

Lecanemab, which is awaiting the green light for NHS use and has already been approved by American regulators, was initially planned to be given as a twice-amonth infusion in hospital.

But new data, published by the drug’s developer Eisai, suggests lecanemab is just as effective at slowing Alzheimer’s when given as a twice-a-week injection. Unlike an infusion, which can take several hours through an IV bag, the jabs can be done within minutes and do not require a trip to hospital.

Lecanemab works by attacking a toxic protein in the brain called amyloid which is linked to dementia symptoms.

Experts have previously said it may be too expensive for the health service to approve. But a move to home injections would reduce the cost of the £20,000-ayear treatment – which requires regular hospital scans – as NHS staff would not need to administer the drug.

However, hopes that the home injection would lower the rate of

‘They need to prove it is safe before rolling it out’

dangerous side effects – including brain swelling and bleeding seen in earlier studies – were dashed. In fact, the recent study, involving 70 participan­ts, showed that the number of patients experienci­ng these complicati­ons increased from 17 to 22 per cent.

While most patients who experience these side effects do not become severely unwell, in some cases the problems can be life-threatenin­g. Three members of a 1,800-participan­t trial of the lecanemab infusion died as a result of side effects linked to the drug.

Speaking to the MoS last night, brain doctors expressed concern about home jabs, saying they feared that allowing patients to take the drug without the close supervisio­n of nurses or doctors could have serious consequenc­es.

‘Doctors don’t have any way of predicting which patients will have these life-threatenin­g side effects,’ says Robert Howard, professor of old age psychiatry at University College London’s Institute of Mental Health. ‘So the idea of allowing patients to take the drug at home without the supervisio­n of a health profession­al is worrying.

‘The drug company needs to carry out larger trials which prove it is safe as an injection, before they roll it out in this form.’

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