Key questions for the evaluation of anti-amyloid immunotherapies for Alzheimer's disease.

Brain Commun

Clinical and Translational Neuroscience Unit, Laboratory of Behavioral Neuroscience, National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA.

Published: June 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Anti-amyloid immunotherapies like aducanumab and lecanemab are emerging drugs aimed at lowering brain amyloid levels to potentially slow the progression of Alzheimer's disease, and they have received accelerated FDA approval.
  • Regulators, payors, and physicians need to evaluate the efficacy, effectiveness, safety, cost, and accessibility of these drugs based on limited clinical trial data, raising three key questions regarding trial analyses, safety versus treatment effects, and evidence of disease modification.
  • A careful evaluation of these therapies is crucial to ensure safe and effective Alzheimer’s treatments are accessible to patients, with a framework suggested for interpreting trial results and addressing uncertainties in existing data.

Article Abstract

The clinical benefit associated with anti-amyloid immunotherapies, a new class of drugs for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease, is predicated on their ability to modify disease course by lowering brain amyloid levels. At the time of writing, two amyloid-lowering antibodies, aducanumab and lecanemab, have obtained United States Food and Drug Administration accelerated approval, with further agents of this class in the Alzheimer's disease treatment pipeline. Based on limited published clinical trial data to date, regulators, payors and physicians will need to assess their efficacy, clinical effectiveness and safety, as well as cost and accessibility. We propose that attention to three important questions related to treatment efficacy, clinical effectiveness and safety should guide evidence-based consideration of this important class of drugs. These are: (1) Were trial statistical analyses appropriate and did they convincingly support claims of efficacy? (2) Do reported treatment effects outweigh safety concerns and are they generalizable to a representative clinical population of people with Alzheimer's disease? and (3) Do the data convincingly demonstrate disease course modification, suggesting that increasing clinical benefits beyond the duration of the trials are likely? We suggest specific approaches to interpreting trial results for these drugs and highlight important areas of uncertainty where additional data and a cautious interpretation of existing results is warranted. Safe, effective and accessible treatments for Alzheimer's disease are eagerly awaited by millions of patients and their caregivers worldwide. While amyloid-targeting immunotherapies may be promising disease-modifying Alzheimer's disease treatments, rigorous and unbiased assessment of clinical trial data is critical to regulatory decision-making and subsequently determining their provision and utility in routine clinical practice. Our recommendations provide a framework for evidence-based appraisal of these drugs by regulators, payors, physicians and patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10306158PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcad175DOI Listing

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