| Literature DB >> 27429978 |
Francesco Panza1, Vincenzo Solfrizzi2, Davide Seripa3, Bruno P Imbimbo4, Madia Lozupone5, Andrea Santamato6, Chiara Zecca7, Maria Rosaria Barulli7, Antonello Bellomo8, Alberto Pilotto9, Antonio Daniele10, Antonio Greco3, Giancarlo Logroscino7.
Abstract
The failure of several Phase II/III clinical trials in Alzheimer's disease (AD) with drugs targeting β-amyloid accumulation in the brain fuelled an increasing interest in alternative treatments against tau pathology, including approaches targeting tau phosphatases/kinases, active and passive immunization, and anti-tau aggregation. The most advanced tau aggregation inhibitor (TAI) is methylthioninium (MT), a drug existing in equilibrium between a reduced (leuco-methylthioninium) and oxidized form (MT(+)). MT chloride (methylene blue) was investigated in a 24-week Phase II clinical trial in 321 patients with mild to moderate AD that failed to show significant positive effects in mild AD patients, although long-term observations (50 weeks) and biomarker studies suggested possible benefit. The dose of 138 mg/day showed potential benefits on cognitive performance of moderately affected AD patients and cerebral blood flow in mildly affected patients. Further clinical evidence will come from the large ongoing Phase III trials for the treatment of AD and the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia on a new form of this TAI, more bioavailable and less toxic at higher doses, called TRx0237. More recently, inhibitors of tau acetylation are being actively pursued based on impressive results in animal studies obtained by salsalate, a clinically used derivative of salicylic acid.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27429978 PMCID: PMC4939203 DOI: 10.1155/2016/3245935
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Ongoing phase I–III randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of tau-directed drugs in clinical development for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease (AD).
| Compound (company) Clinicaltrials.gov identifier | Mechanism of action | Estimated enrollment | Characteristics | Status |
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| TRx0237 (LMTX) | Tau aggregation inhibitor | 9 patients already taking medications for probable mild to moderate AD (2012-2013) | TRx0237 tablets 250 mg/day (given as 125 mg bid) for 4 weeks | Phase II trial (completed) |
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| TRx0237 (LMTX) | Tau aggregation inhibitor | 700 patients with probable mild AD (2012–2015) | TRx0237 100 mg tablets administered twice daily | Phase III trial (active not recruiting) |
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| TRx0237 (LMTX) | Tau aggregation inhibitor | 833 patients with probable mild to moderate AD (2013–2016) | TRx0237 125 mg tablets administered twice daily | Phase III trial (active not recruiting) |
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| TRx0237 (LMTX) | Tau aggregation inhibitor | 220 patients with behavioral variant of FTD (2013–2016) | TRx0237 100 mg tablet administered twice daily | Phase II trial (active not recruiting) |
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| TRx0237 (LMTX) | Tau aggregation inhibitor | Subjects who have completed participation in a Phase II or Phase III trial with TRx0237 continued access to therapy to evaluate the long-term safety of TRx0237 (2014–2017) | All subjects will initially be given 200 mg/day of TRx0237 administered twice daily. Thereafter, dosing is flexible (100 mg/day to 300 mg/day) | Open label Phase II trial (currently recruiting) |
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| TPI-287 | Microtubule-stabilizing agent | 33 patients with mild to moderate AD (2013–2015) | The purpose of the study is to determine the highest dose of TPI-287 that is safe and tolerable when administered as an intravenous infusion | Phase I trial (currently recruiting) |
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| AADvac1 | Active tau-based immunotherapy | 30 patients with mild to moderate AD (2013–2015) | Patients will receive 1 dose of AADvac1 per month over 3 months, for a total of 3 administrations | Phase I trial (completed) |
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| AADvac1 (Axon Neuroscience SE) | Active tau-based immunotherapy | This follow-up study continues to observe patients who have completed the Phase I trial of AADvac1, for another 18 months (2014–2017) | Patients who have received 6 doses in the previous trial will be given 1-2 booster doses of AADvac1 (2 if their antibody titers decline below those achieved in the previous trial). | 18-month follow-up |
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| AADvac1 | Active tau-based immunotherapy | 185 patients with mild AD (2016–2019) | Patients will receive 6 doses of AADvac1 in 4-week intervals and then 2 individual booster doses in 6-month intervals, for a total of 8 doses | Phase II trial (currently recruiting) |
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| ACI-35 | Active tau-based immunotherapy | Patients with mild to moderate AD (2013–2014) | This Phase I trial compared two doses of ACI-35 to investigate its safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity | Phase I trial (active, not recruiting) |
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| RG7345 (RO6926496, MAb86) | Passive tau-based immunotherapy | 48 healthy subjects (January 2015–October 2015) | Single, ascending dose, intravenous administration | Phase I trial (active, not recruiting) |