| Literature DB >> 31470905 |
Jeffrey Cummings1, Howard H Feldman2, Philip Scheltens3.
Abstract
There is a high rate of failure in Alzheimer's disease (AD) drug development with 99% of trials showing no drug-placebo difference. This low rate of success delays new treatments for patients and discourages investment in AD drug development. Studies across drug development programs in multiple disorders have identified important strategies for decreasing the risk and increasing the likelihood of success in drug development programs. These experiences provide guidance for the optimization of AD drug development. The "rights" of AD drug development include the right target, right drug, right biomarker, right participant, and right trial. The right target identifies the appropriate biologic process for an AD therapeutic intervention. The right drug must have well-understood pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic features, ability to penetrate the blood-brain barrier, efficacy demonstrated in animals, maximum tolerated dose established in phase I, and acceptable toxicity. The right biomarkers include participant selection biomarkers, target engagement biomarkers, biomarkers supportive of disease modification, and biomarkers for side effect monitoring. The right participant hinges on the identification of the phase of AD (preclinical, prodromal, dementia). Severity of disease and drug mechanism both have a role in defining the right participant. The right trial is a well-conducted trial with appropriate clinical and biomarker outcomes collected over an appropriate period of time, powered to detect a clinically meaningful drug-placebo difference, and anticipating variability introduced by globalization. We lack understanding of some critical aspects of disease biology and drug action that may affect the success of development programs even when the "rights" are adhered to. Attention to disciplined drug development will increase the likelihood of success, decrease the risks associated with AD drug development, enhance the ability to attract investment, and make it more likely that new therapies will become available to those with or vulnerable to the emergence of AD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Biomarkers; Clinical trials; Drug development
Year: 2019 PMID: 31470905 PMCID: PMC6717388 DOI: 10.1186/s13195-019-0529-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 6.982
Fig. 1The rights of AD drug development
Role of biomarkers in AD drug development
| Role in trial | Examples of biomarker used |
|---|---|
| Identification of trial population | Presence of presenilin 1 (PS1), presenilin 2 (PS2), or amyloid precursor protein (APP) mutations; ApoE-4 plus TOMM40; trisomy 21 |
| Confirmation of diagnosis; exclude non-AD diagnoses | Amyloid imaging; CSF AD signature |
| Prognosis and course projection | In MCI, ApoE-4 carriers progress more rapidly |
| Amyloid production and clearance (target engagement) | Stable isotope-labeled kinetics (SILK); BACE activity reduction with BACE inhibitor; CSF Aβ reduction by BACE inhibitor or gamma-secretase inhibitor |
| Impact of therapy on brain circuit and network function | fMRI; EEG |
| Impact of therapy on intermediate targets | Amyloid imaging; CSF amyloid; tau PET; CSF phospho-tau |
| Disease modification | MRI atrophy; CSF total tau; FDG PET; neurofilament light |
| Stratification for trial analysis | ApoE-4 genotype |
| Side effect monitoring | MRI surveillance for amyloid-related imaging abnormalities (ARIA); liver function tests; complete blood counts; electrocardiography |
Fig. 2Spectrum of AD and the corresponding cognitive and biomarker state of trial participants (A, amyloid abnormalities; T, tau abnormalities; N, neurodegeneration)
Instruments appropriate as the outcome assessments in different phases of AD
| Domain | Prevention trials | Prodromal AD trials | AD dementia trials |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cognition | PACC; APCC | NTB | ADAS-cog in mild to moderate AD; SIB in moderate to severe AD |
| Global/composite | None | CDR-sb; ADCOMS; iADRS | CIBIC+ in shorter trials; CDR-sb in longer trials |
| Function | None | ADCS ADL MCI scale; Amsterdan IADL scale | ADCS ADL scale |
| Behavior | NPI | NPI | NPI |
ADAS-cog Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive subscale, ADCOMS Alzheimer’s Disease Composite Scale, Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study Activities of Daily Living scale, APCC Alzheimer’s Prevention Initiative (API) Composite Cognitive, CDR-sb Clinical Dementia Rating-Sum of Boxes, CIBIC+ Clinical Interview-Based Impression of Change with Caregiver Input, IADL Instrumental Activities of Daily Living, iADRS Integrated Alzheimer’s Disease Rating Scale, NPI Neuropsychiatric Inventory, NTB neuropsychological test battery, PACC Preclinical Alzheimer Cognitive Composite, SIB severe impairment battery
Five “rights” implemented across the spectrum of drug development
| Right element | Target identification | Drug candidate optimization | Non-clinical assessment | Phase 1 | Phase 2 | Phase 3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target | Druggable target identified in AD biology | PD effect supported | PD effect may be assessed with biomarkers | PD effect supported by biomarkers | PD effect supported by biomarkers and clinical outcomes | |
| Drug | Chemical properties | ADME; toxicity; efficacy in animals | PK, ADME in healthy volunteers; MTD established; BBB penetration established | PK, PD in AD | PD in AD | |
| Biomarker | Development of biomarkers useful in trials | Toxicity biomarkers | Patient selection; target engagement biomarkers | Patient selection; DM; toxicity; predictive biomarkers | ||
| Patient | Healthy volunteers; AD for immuuno-therapy trials | Prodromal AD, AD dementia | High-risk normal subjects; prodromal AD; AD dementia | |||
| Trial | Single ascending dose; multiple ascending dose | Drug-placebo difference at endpoint; adaptive designs | Drug-placebo difference at endpoint; adaptive designs; delay to milestone |
AD Alzheimer’s disease; ADME absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion; DM disease modification; PK pharmacokinetics; PD pharmacodynamic