AI Article Synopsis

  • This review discusses gantenerumab, a fully human anti-amyloid monoclonal antibody aimed at treating Alzheimer's disease (AD) by targeting and potentially reversing amyloid plaque pathology.
  • The development faced challenges, including failed molecules from drug-related issues and study design flaws, but gained momentum with the FDA's approval of aducanumab as a disease-modifying therapy.
  • The gantenerumab development includes lessons from past research, focusing on amyloid positivity for patient selection, ensuring a measurable clinical decline, and prioritizing a manageable subcutaneous delivery method.

Article Abstract

Background: This review describes the research and development process of gantenerumab, a fully human anti-amyloid monoclonal antibody in development to treat early symptomatic and asymptomatic Alzheimer's disease (AD). Anti-amyloid monoclonal antibodies can substantially reverse amyloid plaque pathology and may modify the course of the disease by slowing or stopping its clinical progression. Several molecules targeting amyloid have failed in clinical development due to drug-related factors (e.g., treatment-limiting adverse events, low potency, poor brain penetration), study design/methodological issues (e.g., disease stage, lack of AD pathology confirmation), and other factors. The US Food and Drug Administration's approval of aducanumab, an anti-amyloid monoclonal antibody as the first potential disease-modifying therapy for AD, signaled the value of more than 20 years of drug development, adding to the available therapies the first nominal success since cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine were approved. BODY: Here, we review over 2 decades of gantenerumab development in the context of scientific discoveries in the broader AD field. Key learnings from the field were incorporated into the gantenerumab phase 3 program, including confirmed amyloid positivity as an entry criterion, an enriched clinical trial population to ensure measurable clinical decline, data-driven exposure-response models to inform a safe and efficacious dosing regimen, and the use of several blood-based biomarkers. Subcutaneous formulation for more pragmatic implementation was prioritized as a key feature from the beginning of the gantenerumab development program.

Conclusion: The results from the gantenerumab phase 3 programs are expected by the end of 2022 and will add critical information to the collective knowledge on the search for effective AD treatments.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9707418PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13195-022-01110-8DOI Listing

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