Changing the course of Alzheimer's disease: anti-amyloid disease-modifying treatments on the horizon
To review the amyloid hypothesis as the predominant mechanistic theory of Alzheimer's disease and update the status of new disease-modifying, anti-amyloid treatments in clinical development. Governmental Web sites and those of professional Alzheimer's disease associations and drug manufact...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Primary care companion to the Journal of clinical psychiatry 2007, Vol.9 (1), p.32-41 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | To review the amyloid hypothesis as the predominant mechanistic theory of Alzheimer's disease and update the status of new disease-modifying, anti-amyloid treatments in clinical development.
Governmental Web sites and those of professional Alzheimer's disease associations and drug manufacturers were searched for new drugs in development. An English-language search of PubMed (January 2003-January 2006) was conducted using the search terms Alzheimer's disease and amyloid hypothesis and each of the drugs and immunotherapies from the 4 identified classes of anti-amyloid, disease-modifying therapies.
Studies and reports were selected on the basis of recent publication, adequate methodology, and completeness of data.
Immunotherapy, γ-secretase inhibitors, selective neurotoxic aggregated 42-amino acid peptide subspecies of amyloid β (Aβ₄₂)-lowering agents (tarenflurbil), inhibitors of amyloid aggregation (tramiprosate), and statins show promise in clinical trials. Safety remains an important factor. Disease-modifying drugs that specifically target the amyloid cascade and do not interact with essential biological pathways are expected to possess a lower rate of unintended adverse events.Agents that selectively target Aβ₄₂ production (e.g., tarenflurbil), block Aβ aggregation (e.g., tramiprosate), or enhance alpha-secretase activity (statins) offer hope for disease modification and prevention and do not appear to interfere with other biological pathways.
Discovery of safe and effective disease-modifying therapies will usher in a new age of Alzheimer's disease treatment. |
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ISSN: | 1523-5998 1555-211X |
DOI: | 10.4088/pcc.v09n0106 |