| Literature DB >> 29070066 |
Craig W Ritchie1,2, Tom C Russ3,4,5,6, Sube Banerjee7, Bob Barber8, Andrew Boaden9, Nick C Fox10, Clive Holmes11, Jeremy D Isaacs12, Ira Leroi13, Simon Lovestone14, Matt Norton15, John O'Brien16, Jim Pearson17, Richard Perry18, James Pickett9, Adam D Waldman19, Wai Lup Wong20, Martin N Rossor10, Alistair Burns13.
Abstract
CONTEXT: This commentary discusses the implications of disease-modifying treatments for Alzheimer's disease which seem likely to appear in the next few years and results from a meeting of British experts in neurodegenerative diseases in Edinburgh. The availability of such treatments would help change public and professional attitudes and accelerate engagement with the prodromal and preclinical populations who might benefit from them. However, this would require an updated understanding of Alzheimer's disease, namely the important distinction between Alzheimer's disease and Alzheimer's dementia. CONSENSUS: Since treatments are likely to be most effective in the early stages, identification of clinically relevant brain changes (for example, amyloid burden using imaging or cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers) will be crucial. While current biomarkers could be useful in identifying eligibility for new therapies, trial data are not available to aid decisions about stopping or continuing treatment in clinical practice. Therefore, effective monitoring of safety and effectiveness when these treatments are introduced into clinical practice will be necessary to inform wide-scale use. Equity of access is key but there is a tension between universal access for everyone with a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease and specifying an eligible population most likely to respond. We propose the resources necessary for an optimal care pathway as well as the necessary education and training for primary and secondary care.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Clinical trials; Dementia; Disease-modification; Service redesign; Therapeutics
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29070066 PMCID: PMC5657110 DOI: 10.1186/s13195-017-0312-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 6.982
Fig. 1The continuum of Alzheimer’s disease pathology from the preclinical and prodromal stages to overt clinical dementia plus the relative importance of biomarker assessment and functional assessment at the different stages
Fig. 2Hypothetical model of intervention with a disease-modifying treatment for Alzheimer’s disease. The curved line depicts a biomarker reflecting a specific drug target which responds to treatment. a depicts the courses of mechanism-specific drug(s). b depicts the accompanying tailored risk factor intervention and advice. The dotted grey line indicates the disease course without treatment—progressive functional deterioration. The solid grey line indicates the disease course with treatment—slower deterioration and better functional outcome, i.e. the delay of onset of clinical dementia. Adapted from Hampel et al. [12]