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Lecanemab: Looking Before We Leap. | LitMetric

Lecanemab: Looking Before We Leap.

Neurology

From the Division of Health Services Research (J.F.B., K.A.K.), Department of Neurology, Ohio State University, Columbus; and Department of Internal Medicine (K.M.L.), and Department of Neurology (R.L.A., V.K.), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

Published: October 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Lecanemab is a newly approved drug aimed at treating mild dementia from Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment, showing some effectiveness in reducing amyloid plaques and cognitive decline, but its overall impact is small and may not be noticeable to patients or caregivers.
  • - Concerns about lecanemab include significant potential harms, such as brain swelling and bleeding, which might be underestimated due to differences between trial participants and the general population, as well as its interaction with other medications.
  • - The drug comes with a staggering price tag of $26,500, raising questions about its cost-effectiveness and affordability, despite the outlined clinical benefits and economic analyses.

Article Abstract

Lecanemab, a novel amyloid-sequestering agent, recently received accelerated Food and Drug Administration approval for the treatment of mild dementia due to Alzheimer disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Approval was based on a large phase 3 trial, Clarity, which demonstrated reductions in amyloid plaque burden and cognitive decline with lecanemab. Three major concerns should give us pause before adopting this medication: Its beneficial effects are small, its harms are substantial, and its potential costs are unprecedented. Although lecanemab has a clear and statistically significant effect on cognition, its effect size is small and may not be clinically significant. The magnitude of lecanemab's cognitive effect is smaller than independent estimates of the minimally important clinical difference, implying that the effect may be imperceptible to a majority of patients and caregivers. Lecanemab's cognitive effects were numerically smaller than the effect of cholinesterase inhibitors and may be much smaller. The main argument in lecanemab's favor is that it may lead to greater cognitive benefit over time. Although plausible, there is a lack of evidence to support this conclusion. Lecanemab's harms are substantial. In Clarity, it caused symptomatic brain edema in 11% and symptomatic intracranial bleeding in 0.5% of participants. These estimates likely significantly underestimate these risks in general practice for 3 reasons: (1) Lecanemab likely interacts with other medications that increase bleeding, an effect minimized in Clarity. (2) The Clarity population is much younger than the real-world population with mild AD dementia and MCI (age 71 years vs 85 years) and bleeding risk increases with age. (3) Bleeding rates in trials are typically much lower than in clinical practice. Lecanemab's costs are unprecedented. Its proposed price of $26,500 is based on cost-effectiveness analyses with tenuous assumptions. However, even if cost-effective, it is likely to result in higher expenditures than any other medication. If its entire target population were treated, the aggregate medication expenditures would be $120 billion US dollars per year-more than is currently spent on all medications in Medicare Part D. Before adopting lecanemab, we need to know that lecanemab is not less effective, vastly more harmful, and 100× more costly than donepezil.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10585683PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000207505DOI Listing

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