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Alzheimer’s Research Has an Integrity Problem, Claim Investigators


 

Lesne and Cassava: The Long and Winding Road

The investigations into the Lesne papers and the work underpinning Cassava Sciences’ therapy point to the difficulty of policing integrity and the potential fallout.

Lesne’s signature paper published in Nature in 2006 has been cited some 2300 times and is the fourth most-accessed article of 81,612 articles of a similar age in all journals tracked by Altimetrics.

Dr. Schrag, Dr. Bik, and others wrote to multiple journals asking them to investigate some 25 papers related to simufilam, including a 2012 Journal of Clinical Investigation article by Hoau-Yan Wang, PhD, the CUNY scientist whose work on simufilam has been questioned.

JCI Editor Elizabeth McNally pushed back stating in an editorial in 2022 that they, as whistleblowers, had potential conflicts and that they could be assisting short sellers who were seeking to profit by depressing Cassava’s stock price. Indeed, Dr. Schrag was initially hired by a law firm that was representing short sellers. Ms. McNally said that JCI would start requiring disclosures by whistleblowers.

Dr. Bik urged CUNY to investigate Dr. Wang in 2021 but was rebuffed. Then, in November 2023, a copy of CUNY’s final report on the Wang inquiry was leaked to Science. The university reported that Dr. Wang did not provide any original data or notebooks and that it found “long-standing and egregious misconduct in data management and record keeping by Dr. Wang,” wrote Dr. Bik in a blog post summarizing the investigation.

As of late 2023, 42 papers by Dr. Wang have earned PubPeer posts, seven have been retracted, and five have been marked with an Expression of Concern, wrote Dr. Bik.

Some have called for Cassava to stop its phase 3 studies of simufilam, but the company is proceeding, announcing in November 2023 that they have completed enrollment.

Misconduct Queries Underway at USC and Temple

Meanwhile, Dr. Schrag and Dr. Bik continue sleuthing. They are among a small group of whistleblowers who have filed a complaint with NIH about irregularities in the Zlokovic lab at USC. They allege that images were manipulated in dozens of papers, including some that inform the development of a stroke drug in phase 2 trials.

The inquiry goes well beyond stroke, said Dr. Schrag. Dr. Zlokovic “is one of the most influential scientists on Alzheimer’s scientists in the country,” Dr. Schrag said. The USC scientist is a leader on blood-brain barrier research.

USC is investigating “at some level,” he said. In a statement to this news organization, USC said that it “takes any allegations about research integrity very seriously.” The statement added, “Consistent with federal regulations and USC policies, this review must be kept confidential. As a result, we are unable to provide any further information.”

Mu Yang, PhD, assistant professor of neurobiology at Columbia University Medical Center in New York City, is also working on the Zlokovic investigation.

She calls herself an “accidental sleuth” who fell into the hobby after a graduate student asked her to help replicate a study by Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, researcher Dominco Pratico, MD, of Alzheimer’s-like phenotype mice in the Morris Water Maze test. Dr. Yang, who runs the “behavior core” at Columbia — teaching and advising on how to run assays and collect and report data — could see right away that the Pratico data were “too perfect.”

She enlisted maze inventor Richard Morris to join her in a letter of concern to the journals that published Dr. Pratico’s work, all under the aegis of Springer Nature.

The publisher’s integrity team has since retracted four Pratico papers. Three were because of image abnormalities pointed out by Dr. Bik, who worked with Dr. Yang. One was because of “self-plagiarism.”

“The official retraction notes didn’t mention anything about data abnormality being a concern,” said Dr. Yang who says that questionable data is harder to prove than an image duplication or manipulation. And the papers remain available, although dozens of Practico papers have been flagged on PubPeer.

To Dr. Yang, images are the canary in the coalmine. “People don’t just fake western blots but then give real behavior data or give you fake behavior data but give you the most authentic Western Blots,” she said.

Dr. Pratico has now sued a graduate student who was a coauthor on the papers, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.

The NIH’s ORI has requested that Temple University conduct an investigation, Dr. Yang said.

In a statement to this news organization, Temple said it “does not comment on internal investigations or personnel issues,” but that “allegations of research misconduct are reviewed and investigated centrally through Temple’s Office of the Vice President for Research in accordance with university policy and applicable federal regulations.”

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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