Publications by authors named "Howard H. Feldman"

Background: Nicotinamide, a form of B3 vitamin, is an NAD precursor that reduces pTau levels via histone deacetylase inhibition in murine models of Alzheimer's disease (AD). A recent phase 2a randomized placebo-controlled trial tested high-dose oral nicotinamide for the treatment of early AD. While nicotinamide demonstrated good safety and tolerability, it did not significantly lower CSF pTau, the primary biomarker endpoint of the study.

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Lecanemab and donanemab are monoclonal antibody therapies that remove amyloid-beta from the brain. They are the first therapies that alter a fundamental mechanism, amyloid-beta deposition, in Alzheimer disease (AD). To inform Canadian decisions on approval and use of these drugs, the Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration in Aging commissioned Work Groups to review evidence on the efficacy and safety of these new therapies, as well as their projected impacts on Canadian dementia systems of care.

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Background: Healthy Actions and Lifestyles to Avoid Dementia Program (HALT-AD) or Hispanos y el ALTo a la Demencia is a recently-developed online educational platform to help individuals identify and modify their own dementia modifiable risk factors (MRF). In light of known challenges in recruiting and retaining diverse participants in research studies, there is a need to identify data-informed strategies that will contribute to effective outreach and tailored implementation of HALT-AD among its intended users of Hispanic and non-Hispanic midlife and older adults in the US.

Objectives: To identify factors (i.

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Background: Disease-modifying therapies targeting the diverse pathophysiology of Alzheimer's disease (AD), including neuroinflammation, represent potentially important and novel approaches. The glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist semaglutide is approved for the treatment of type 2 diabetes and obesity and has an established safety profile. Semaglutide may have a disease-modifying, neuroprotective effect in AD through multimodal mechanisms including neuroinflammatory, vascular, and other AD-related processes.

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Background And Objectives: Nicotinamide is a coenzyme involved in cellular oxidation-reduction reactions that can inhibit Class III histone deacetylases (HDACs) or sirtuins. HDAC inhibition can affect numerous therapeutic pathways, including tau phosphorylation. We tested the hypothesis that nicotinamide treatment could reduce tau phosphorylation in early Alzheimer disease (AD).

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Article Synopsis
  • Tau pathology is closely linked to cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease (AD), prompting the development of tau-targeting immunotherapies like AADvac1, aimed at halting disease progression.
  • The ADAMANT clinical trial evaluated AADvac1 in a subgroup of mild AD participants with elevated plasma p-tau217 levels over 24 months, focusing on safety and several cognitive and biological outcome measures.
  • Results showed AADvac1 was safe and well-tolerated, significantly reduced levels of plasma neurofilament light and glial fibrillary acidic protein, and had a favorable—though not statistically significant—impact on cognitive scores and brain tissue preservation in certain regions, particularly in older participants.
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  • * Concerns are raised about purely biological definitions being used in clinical settings, especially since many biomarker-positive but cognitively normal individuals may never develop symptoms, complicating diagnosis and patient understanding.
  • * The authors advocate for a combined clinical-biological definition of AD that accommodates at-risk and presymptomatic stages, emphasizing the need for caution in diagnosing AD without fully understanding the implications for patients.
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  • - Varoglutamstat is a new small molecule being tested for early Alzheimer's disease, targeting glutaminyl cyclase to potentially reduce toxic forms of amyloid-β and neuroinflammatory cytokines.
  • - The VIVA-MIND trial is structured in two phases, with phase 2A focusing on determining the safe dose and phase 2B evaluating the drug's effectiveness and long-term safety through a 72-week period.
  • - The trial's design allows for continuous safety assessments and adaptive decision-making based on cognitive function and electroencephalogram changes, aiming to confirm varoglutamstat's unique ability to tackle several aspects of Alzheimer's pathology.
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  • Therapeutic research on Alzheimer's disease (AD) has shifted towards drug repositioning, specifically looking at FDA-approved medications like efavirenz as potential AD treatments.
  • At low doses, efavirenz activates the enzyme CYP46A1 which helps reduce excess brain cholesterol and improve memory deficits in AD models, showing promising effects without the neurotoxic risks associated with higher doses used for HIV treatment.
  • The review highlights the need for further studies on efavirenz's properties, safety, and effectiveness to evaluate its potential as a candidate for AD drug development.
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The tauopathies are defined by pathological tau protein aggregates within a spectrum of clinically heterogeneous neurodegenerative diseases. The primary tauopathies meet the definition of rare diseases in the United States. There is no approved treatment for primary tauopathies.

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Introduction: The objective of this pilot study was to establish the feasibility of recruiting older Vietnamese Americans for research addressing genetic and nongenetic risk factors for Alzheimer disease (AD).

Methods: Twenty-six Vietnamese Americans were recruited from communities in San Diego. A Community Advisory Board provided cultural and linguistic advice.

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Introduction: Bumetanide, a loop diuretic, was identified as a candidate drug for repurposing for Alzheimer's disease (AD) based on its effects on transcriptomic apolipoprotein E signatures. Cross-sectional analyses of electronic health records suggest that bumetanide is associated with decreased prevalence of AD; however, temporality between bumetanide exposure and AD development has not been established.

Methods: We evaluated Medicare claims data using Cox proportional hazards regression to evaluate the association between time-dependent use of bumetanide and time to first AD diagnosis while controlling for patient characteristics.

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Introduction: The "A/T/N" (amyloid/tau/neurodegeneration) framework provides a biological basis for Alzheimer's disease (AD) diagnosis and can encompass additional changes such as inflammation ("I"). A spectrum of T/N/I imaging and plasma biomarkers was acquired in a phase 2 clinical trial of rasagiline in mild to moderate AD patients. We evaluated these to understand biomarker distributions and relationships within this population.

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Background: Amyloid beta protein (Aβ) is a treatment target in Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Lowering production of its parent protein, APP, has benefits in preclinical models. Posiphen, an orally administered small molecule, binds to an iron-responsive element in APP mRNA and decreases translation of APP and Aβ.

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Article Synopsis
  • Benfotiamine is being tested as a new oral treatment option for early Alzheimer's disease (AD), potentially enhancing the effects of existing therapies targeting amyloid.
  • A 72-week randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial will investigate its safety, tolerability, and efficacy in 406 participants, starting with a phase 2A to find the optimal dose before moving to phase 2B.
  • The trial's innovative design allows for a smooth transition between phases, aiming to confirm benefits through specific cognitive and safety assessments.
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Introduction: In the Investigating the Impact of Alzheimer's Disease Diagnostics in British Columbia (IMPACT-AD BC) study, we aimed to understand how Alzheimer's disease (AD) cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarker testing-used in medical care-impacted medical decision-making (medical utility), personal decision-making (personal utility), and health system economics.

Methods: The study was designed as an observational, longitudinal cohort study. A total of 149 patients were enrolled between February 2019 and July 2021.

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Introduction: We described patients' and care partners' experiences with Alzheimer's disease (AD) cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarker testing and result disclosure in routine care.

Methods: IMPACT-AD BC is an observational study of clinic patients who underwent AD CSF biomarker testing as part of their routine medical care ( = 142). In the personal utility arm of the study, semi-structured phone interviews were conducted with a subset of patients ( = 34), and separately with their care partners ( = 31).

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Background: Amyloid beta protein (Aβ) is a treatment target in Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Lowering production of its parent protein, APP, has benefits in preclinical models. Posiphen binds to an iron-responsive element in APP mRNA and decreases translation of APP and Aβ.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cognitive composite scales are increasingly used in Alzheimer's research as endpoints for trials, but existing methods may use inefficient weighting.
  • A study found that using standard deviation weighting for these composites required significantly more participants for clinical trials compared to optimal weighting methods.
  • The results highlight the need for better weighting strategies to enhance the effectiveness of cognitive composites in Alzheimer's research and possibly reduce the number of subjects needed for studies.
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Introduction: With Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) representing an enormous public health challenge, there is a need to support individuals in learning about and addressing their modifiable risk factors (e.g., diet, sleep, and physical activity) to prevent or delay dementia onset.

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Introduction: Clinical research in Alzheimer's disease (AD) lacks cohort diversity despite being a global health crisis. The Asian Cohort for Alzheimer's Disease (ACAD) was formed to address underrepresentation of Asians in research, and limited understanding of how genetics and non-genetic/lifestyle factors impact this multi-ethnic population.

Methods: The ACAD started fully recruiting in October 2021 with one central coordination site, eight recruitment sites, and two analysis sites.

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Background: Tau pathology correlates with and predicts clinical decline in Alzheimer's disease. Approved tau-targeted therapies are not available.

Methods: ADAMANT, a 24-month randomised, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, double-blinded, multicenter, Phase 2 clinical trial (EudraCT2015-000630-30, NCT02579252) enrolled 196 participants with Alzheimer's disease; 119 are included in this post-hoc subgroup analysis.

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Therapeutics discovery and development for Alzheimer's disease (AD) has been an area of intense research to alleviate memory loss and the underlying pathogenic processes. Recent drug discovery approaches have utilized computational strategies for drug candidate selection which has opened the door to repurposing drugs for AD. Computational analysis of gene expression signatures of patients stratified by the APOE4 risk allele of AD led to the discovery of the FDA-approved drug bumetanide as a top candidate agent that reverses APOE4 transcriptomic brain signatures and improves memory deficits in APOE4 animal models of AD.

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Disturbances in the brain's capacity to meet its energy demand increase the risk of synaptic loss, neurodegeneration, and cognitive decline. Nutritional and metabolic interventions that target metabolic pathways combined with diagnostics to identify deficits in cerebral bioenergetics may therefore offer novel therapeutic potential for Alzheimer's disease (AD) prevention and management. Many diet-derived natural bioactive components can govern cellular energy metabolism but their effects on brain aging are not clear.

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