Conference Coverage

Analysis of failed Alzheimer’s trials gives two antiamyloid antibodies new momentum


 

AT CTAD

– Despite years of frustrating failures, Alzheimer’s researchers keep punching away at beta-amyloid brain plaques, now apparently with a highly focused one-two of “more drug, given sooner.”

Solanezumab and gantenerumab – both of which failed in earlier phase 3 studies – will be pushed forward now at much higher doses, the Alzheimer’s disease research community learned at the opening session of the Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease conference.

A picture of a pencil's eraser erasing away a drawing of a brain. Trifonenko/Thinkstock
Based on a rethinking of the failed EXPEDITION trial series, researchers will quadruple the dose of solanezumab in the ongoing Anti-Amyloid Treatment in Asymptomatic Alzheimer’s Disease (A4) prevention study. Patients already enrolled will be titrated up from 400-mg to 1,600-mg infusions every month, principal investigator Reisa Sperling, MD, said at the meeting. Gantenerumab will be tested in two new phase 3 studies at a much higher dose than was used in either the now-defunct Scarlet Road and Marguerite Road studies, according to Gregory Klein, PhD, of Roche.

Both drugs are antiamyloid antibodies. In their prior trials, both effectively cleared amyloid plaques, but neither significantly improved cognition in patients with mild-moderate disease. This has been a common theme of every antiamyloid study: Although these drugs stimulate different mechanisms of plaque removal, none has ever significantly improved thinking or memory.

In discussing these failures, the Alzheimer’s research community has collectively wondered whether the doses were high enough. Drug companies have erred on the side of caution in large part because antiamyloid antibodies can cause a syndrome called ARIA (Amyloid-Related Imaging Abnormalities), an inflammatory response of brain edema or microhemorrhages. Concern over this side effect has moderated as researchers accumulate more adverse event data. Most cases are asymptomatic and resolve spontaneously. New open-label extension data from the Scarlet Road and Marguerite Road trials of gantenerumab, plus a new titration model by Roche, have also increased confidence that patients will tolerate the antibody at subcutaneous doses of up to 1,200 mg.

The other fear that plagues researchers is therapeutic timing. It’s increasingly apparent that plaque eradication does not rescue cognition. As heart disease must be attacked before cardiac damage occurs, it seems likely that Alzheimer’s disease must be attacked before amyloid and its attendant protein, tau, wreak havoc in the hippocampus and neocortex.

After reevaluating the high-profile solanezumab and gantenerumab failures, researchers now hope that higher doses delivered much earlier in the disease process might be effective, not at restoring lost cognition, but at preventing cognitive decline in the first place.

“One of the greatest advances in this field over the past 10 years is the recognition that Alzheimer’s disease is a continuum that likely begins well before the stage we recognize as dementia, and even before the stages of mild cognitive impairment [MCI] and prodromal Alzheimer’s,” said Dr. Sperling of Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston. “Treating in the presymptomatic phase may be the best opportunity to bend this curve back toward the trajectory of normal aging.”

But amyloid is only part of the Alzheimer’s disease story. Tau is a key player and, some say, the prime antagonist, since it is the main driver of memory and thought decline. Tau is present deep in the brains of most cognitively aging normal people, but something about amyloid deposition spurs its devastating spread into the neocortex. Preventing amyloid accumulation may prevent dementia, not just by keeping amyloid at bay, but by preventing it from igniting the spread of tau.

Dr. Sperling cited unpublished data showing very subtle cognitive decline in cognitively normal patients who have both amyloid and tau in the brain. Although the scores stayed within normal, subjects with both declined over 2 years on specific measures of memory and were more likely to progress to MCI.

“This is very striking to me and made me a little worried about the critical window of intervention,” she said. “What is also striking is that, even though we restricted the eligibility criteria of A4 to those with normal memory and normal cognition, we do see that tau positivity at baseline is associated with lower baseline performance. Again we have this suggestion that amyloid is associated with tau and tau is associated with poor memory even in normal people.”

Although hard to swallow, digesting solanezumab’s failure in the series of EXPEDITION studies has now refined the A4 protocol. “To be honest, I didn’t sleep for months following the release of EXPEDITION 3 data, because I was really concerned about how it should guide us about changes to A4. We think solanezumab has an increased chance of success here [compared with EXPEDITION] because we’re employing it 10-15 years earlier in the disease. But we also want to maximize its chances.”

Thus, she said, investigators and Eli Lilly have now decided to quadruple the dose in A4. Subjects will titrate from 600 mg to 800 mg for 2 months and then go up to 1,600 mg every 4 weeks. A safety cohort of 200 patients will be monitored for any adverse events, with a particular eye out for hemorrhagic or edematous ARIA. “We are also extending the double-blind phase to 240 weeks, which allows everyone to dose-escalate and increases our power to detect small effect sizes,” she said.

Right now, recruitment stands at 1,151; Dr. Sperling expects the full 1,200-subject cohort to be randomized by the end of 2017.

Gantenerumab is also experiencing a rebirth after a deep dive into open-label extension data from both the Scarlet Road and Marguerite Road studies, Dr. Klein said. Patients in these studies were randomized to either 105 or 225 mg of the antibody. While there were no significant cognitive benefits, there were trends toward improvement with the higher dose, as well as dose-dependent plaque clearance. This encouraged researchers to look at higher doses in 52-week open-label extensions of each study.

Dr. Klein presented new imaging data for these studies. Between both, 40 patients were maintained for 6-9 months on the highest doses (900-1,200 mg). Of these, 17 had almost total clearance of their amyloid burden. Their scans, Dr. Klein said, read as traces of amyloid or as amyloid negative. The effect was consistent regardless of the amount of amyloid at baseline.

“These are very encouraging biomarker data,” he said. “We are going into our new phase 3 studies, Graduate I and II, very optimistic.”

Little information is available about these studies. According to a press release, they will target patients with prodromal-mild disease at the higher doses. Emails to Roche and its German partner, MorphoSys, were not returned by press time. But from Dr. Klein’s comments, it seems clear that gantenerumab has not reached the end of its road.

Dr. Sperling disclosed relationships with numerous pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Klein is an employee of Roche.

On Twitter @alz_gal

Recommended Reading

Paying it forward
MDedge Psychiatry
Brain scan study suggests serotonin drives early cognitive decline
MDedge Psychiatry
Cognitive decline not seen with lower BP treatment targets
MDedge Psychiatry
Fueling the Alzheimer’s brain with fat
MDedge Psychiatry
Study linked H2 receptor antagonists, but not PPIs, to dementia
MDedge Psychiatry
Higher BP targets suggested for elderly, cognitively impaired
MDedge Psychiatry
Personality changes may not occur before Alzheimer’s onset
MDedge Psychiatry
APOE affects tau pathology independent of amyloid-beta
MDedge Psychiatry
VIDEO: Alzheimer’s blood test expected soon
MDedge Psychiatry
Lumateperone shows broad phase 3 potential for psychiatric disorders
MDedge Psychiatry

Related Articles