| Literature DB >> 30689575 |
Jeffrey L Cummings1, Gary Tong2, Clive Ballard3.
Abstract
Although Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the world's leading cause of dementia and the population of patients with AD continues to grow, no new therapies have been approved in more than a decade. Many clinical trials of single-agent therapies have failed to affect disease progression or symptoms compared with placebo. The complex pathophysiology of AD may necessitate combination treatments rather than monotherapy. The goal of this narrative literature review is to describe types of combination therapy, review the current clinical evidence for combination therapy regimens (both symptomatic and disease-modifying) in the treatment of AD, describe innovative clinical trial study designs that may be effective in testing combination therapy, and discuss the regulatory and drug development landscape for combination therapy. Successful combination therapies in other complex disorders, such as human immunodeficiency virus, may provide useful examples of a potential path forward for AD treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; cholinesterase inhibitor; dementia; disease-modifying; memantine; symptomatic; treatment combination
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30689575 PMCID: PMC6398562 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-180766
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Fig.1Combination therapies in the AD drug development pipeline. 5-HT, 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin); Aβ, amyloid-β; AChE1, acetylcholinesterase inhibitor; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; BACE, aspartyl protease β-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; MAO, monoamine oxidase; NMDA, N-methyl-D-aspartate; PPAR, peroxisome-proliferator activated receptor; RAGE, receptor for advanced glycation end-products; rTMS, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation.
Add-On Clinical Trials of Combination Treatments for AD
| Disease modifying | ||||||
| Aducanumab | NR | Amyloid passive immunization | Early | III | SOC† | NCT02484547 |
| NCT02477800 | ||||||
| Gantenerumab | NR | Early | II/III | NR‡ | NCT01760005 | |
| III | SOC† | NCT02051608 | ||||
| Crenezumab | NR | Amyloid passive immunization | Early | III | SOC† | NCT02670083 NCT03114657 |
| Solanezumab | NR | Amyloid passive immunization | Early | II/III | NR‡ | NCT01760005 |
| JNJ-54861911 | NR | BACE inhibitor | Early | II/III | NR‡ | NCT01760005 |
| Masitinib | 3.0 or 4.5 mg/kg/d | Selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor | Mild to moderate | III | Rivastigmine and/or memantine | NCT01872598 |
| ALZT-OP1 (cromolyn and ibuprofen) | NR | Anti-amyloid/anti-inflammatory | Early | III | AChEI’s† and/or memantine† | NCT02547818 |
| Flebogama DIF 5% and Albutein 20% | NR | Intravenous human immunoglobulin, human albumin | Mild, moderate | II/III | AChEI’s and/or memantine | NCT01561053 |
| BAN2401 | 2.5, 5.0, or 10.0 mg/kg once biweekly; or 5.0 or 10 mg/kg once a month | Amyloid passive immunization | Early | II | AChEI’s† and/or memantine† | NCT01767311 |
| AADvac-1 | Axon peptide 108 40 μg; 6 doses in 4-week intervals, then 5 doses in 3-month intervals | Tau active immunization | Mild | II | AChEI; memantine (permitted but not required | NCT02579252 |
| ABBV-8E12 | NR | Tau passive immunization | Early | II | SOC† | NCT02880956 |
| Nasal insulin | Insulin 20 IU BID | Peptide hormone | Early | II/III | NR‡ | NCT01767909 |
| Glulisine 20 IU BID | II | AChEI or memantine | NCT02503501 | |||
| Liraglutide | 1.8 mg/d | GLP-1 receptor agonist | Mild | II | AChEI† | NCT01843075 |
| Sargramostim | 250 μg/m2/d for 5 days/week for 3 weeks | GM-CSF | Mild, moderate | II | AChEI† and/or memantine† or Axona† | NCT01409915 |
| Telmisartan | 40 or 80 mg/d | Angiotensin II receptor antagonist | Mild, moderate | II | AChEI and/or memantine | NCT02085265 |
| Nicotinamide | 1500 mg BID | Vitamin B3 | Early | II | SOC† | NCT03061474 |
| Saracatinib | 100 to 125 mg/d | Src/abl kinase family inhibitor | Mild | II | AChEI’s† and/or memantine† and/or antidepressants† | NCT02167256 |
| UE2343 | 10 mg/d | β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase inhibitor | Mild | II | AChEI’s† and/or memantine† | NCT02727699 |
| ANAVEX2-73 | 30 or 50 mg/d | Sigma-1 chaperone agonist | Mild, moderate | II | SOC | NCT02244541 |
| BIIB092 | NR | Tau passive immunization | Early | II | SOC† | NCT03352557 |
| Curcumin and yoga | Curcumin: 800 mg/d; yoga: aerobic or nonaerobic | Dietary supplement/ exercise regimen | MCI | II | NR† | NCT01811381 |
| Deep brain stimulation of the fornix | NR | Procedural intervention | NR | NA | AChEI’s and/or memantine | NCT03290274 |
| Neflamapimod | 40 mg BID | p38 MAPK alpha inhibitor | Early, mild | II | AChEI† or memantine† | NCT03402659 |
| Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation | 2 or 4 weeks of once-daily treatment 5 days/week; at 20Hz | Procedural intervention | Mild, moderate | NA | AChEI† | NCT02908815 |
| CT1812 | 280 or 560 mg/d | Sigma-2 receptor ligand | Mild, moderate | I/II | AChEI† or memantine† | NCT02907567 |
| T3D-959 | 3, 10, 30, or 90 mg/d for 2 weeks | PPAR | Mild, moderate | I/II | NR‡ | NCT02560753 |
| ACI-24 | 340 to 460 μg/mL | Amyloid passive immunization | Mild, moderate | I/II | AChEI | 2008-006257-40 (EudraCT) |
| ACI-35 | NR | Tau active immunization | Mild, moderate | I | AChEI | ISRCTN13033912 (ISRCTN registry) |
| ABvac40 | NR | Amyloid active immunization | Mild, moderate | II | NR† | Unregistered trial ongoing |
| TPI 287 | 2.0, 6.3, or 20 mg/m2 once every 3 weeks | Microtubule stabilizer | Mild, moderate | I | SOC† | NCT01966666 |
| LY3303560 | NR | Tau passive immunization | Early, mild, moderate | AChEI†, memantine,† and/or other AD therapy† | NCT03019536 | |
| NR‡ | NCT02754830 | |||||
| Idalopirdine | 30 or 60 mg/d | 5-HT6 antagonist | Mild, moderate | III | Donepezil 10 mg/d | NCT01955161 |
| 10 or 30 mg/d | Donepezil 10 mg/d | NCT02006641 | ||||
| 30 or 60 mg/d | AChEI | NCT02006654 | ||||
| 60 mg/d | Donepezil 10 mg/d or donepezil 10 mg/d and memantine (IR 20 mg/d or XR 28 mg/d) | NCT02079246 | ||||
| Intepirdine | 35 mg/d | 5-HT6 antagonist | Mild, moderate | III | Donepezil 5 or 10 mg/d | NCT02585934 |
| II | AChEI | NCT02910102 | ||||
| LY3002813 | NR; alone or in combination with LY3202626 | Amyloid passive immunization | Early | II | AChEI and/or memantine | NCT03367403 |
| Symptomatic | ||||||
| Levetiracetam | NR | Anticonvulsant | Mild, moderate | II | Donepezil,† galantamine,† rivastigmine,† or memantine† | NCT02002819 |
| SUVN-502 | NR | 5-HT6 antagonist | Moderate | II | Donepezil and memantine | NCT02580305 |
| Citalopram | 30 mg/d | Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor | Mild, moderate, severe | III | SOC | NCT00898807 |
| Sertraline | 25 to 125 mg/d (target dose, 100 mg/d) | Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor | NR | II/III | SOC | NCT00086138 |
| Risperidone | Up to 1.5 mg/d followed by divalproex if agitation persists | Serotonin-dopamine antagonist antipsychotic | NR | IV | NR‡ | NCT00208819 |
| Olanzapine | Up to 7.5 mg/d followed by divalproex if agitation persists | Multi-acting receptor-targeted antipsychotic | NR | IV | NR‡ | NCT00208819 |
| Quetiapine | NR | Multi-acting receptor-targeted antipsychotic | NR | NA | AChEI† | NCT00232570 |
| Brexpiprazole | 1 or 2 mg/d | Partial dopamine receptor agonist | Mild, moderate, severe | II/III | NR | NCT03620981 |
| Aripiprazole | 2, 3, or 6 mg/d | Partial dopamine receptor agonist | Mild, moderate, severe | III | NR‡ | NCT02168920 |
| Rasagiline | 0.5 mg/d, uptitrated to 1 mg/d | Monoamine oxidase B inhibitor | Mild, moderate | II | AChEI† or memantine† | NCT02359552 |
| Piromelatine | 5, 20, or 50 mg/d | Melatonin and serotonin receptor agonist | Mild | II | Prescribed drugs for AD including AChEI’s† | NCT02615002 |
| Riluzole | NR | Glutamate neurotransmission modulator | Mild | II | Donepezil or rivastigmine† or galantamine† | NCT01703117 |
5-HT, 5-hydroxytrytamine (serotonin); AChEI, acetylcholinesterase inhibitor; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; BACE, aspartyl protease β-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme 1; BID, twice-daily; EudraCT, European Clinical Trials Database; GLP-1, glucagon-like peptide-1; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; IR, immediate release; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; NA, not available; NR, not reported; PPAR, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor; SOC, standard-of-care medication(s) for AD (agent/dose not specified); XR, extended release. *Doses of baseline therapy were not reported except where indicated. †Patients who were receiving stable standard-of-care therapy and those not currently receiving therapy were eligible. ‡Available inclusion/exclusion criteria did not note baseline use of AD therapy.
Fig.2Combination drug development.