| Literature DB >> 31476157 |
David R Elmaleh1,2, Martin R Farlow3, Peter S Conti4, Ronald G Tompkins5, Ljiljana Kundakovic2, Rudolph E Tanzi6.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) clinical trials, focused on disease modifying drugs and conducted in patients with mild to moderate AD, as well as prodromal (early) AD, have failed to reach efficacy endpoints in improving cognitive function in most cases to date or have been terminated due to adverse events. Drugs that have reached clinical stage were reviewed using web resources (such as clinicaltrials.gov, alzforum.org, company press releases, and peer reviewed literature) to identify late stage (Phase II and Phase III) efficacy clinical trials and summarize reasons for their failure. For each drug, only the latest clinical trials and ongoing trials that aimed at improving cognitive function were included in the analysis. Here we highlight the potential reasons that have hindered clinical success, including clinical trial design and choice of outcome measures, heterogeneity of patient populations, difficulties in diagnosing and staging the disease, drug design, mechanism of action, and toxicity related to the long-term use. We review and suggest approaches for AD clinical trial design aimed at improving our ability to identify novel therapies for this devastating disease.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; amyloid-β; biomarkers; clinical trial design; combined modality therapy; inflammation; selection of subjects; tau protein; treatment outcomes
Year: 2019 PMID: 31476157 PMCID: PMC6839593 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-190507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Fig.1Schematic Representation of Therapeutic Strategies. 1) Enhancement of neurotransmission; 2) Reduction of Aβ production and aggregation; 3) Enhancement of Aβ clearance; 4) Prevention of tau aggregation; 5) Anti-inflammatory agents; 6) Enhancement of microglial phagocytosis.
Comparison of properties of Tau and Aβ proteins
| Tau | Aβ | |
| Structure | ||
| Role | Tabular stabilizer | Signal transduction /other |
| Size (MW) | 55,000–62,000 | Aβ42 = 45 |
| # amino acids | 352–441 | 36–43 |
| Normal structures | Six isoforms, 4 sequence repeats | Soluble/single |
| Slow polymerization | ||
| Normal washout | ||
| Structures in AD | 3 sequence repeats | Oligomers and tangles |
| Phosphorylation & tangles | ||
| AD tangles | Intra neuron | Synapse/interneuron |
Late stage clinical trials: Neurotransmitters
| Drug | Treatment/Target | Clinical Trial Information | Results |
| Intepirdine | Antagonist of the serotonin 6 (5-HT6) receptor | Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| Idalopirdine | Antagonist of the serotonin 6 (5-HT6) receptor | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| PF-05212377 | Antagonist of the serotonin 6 (5-HT6) receptor | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| Xaliproden | Serotonin 1A (5HT1-A) receptor antagonist | Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| ABT-288 | Histamine H3 receptor antagonist | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| GSK239512 | Histamine H3 receptor antagonist | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| S 38093 | Histamine H3 receptor antagonist | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| Encenicline | Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | Gastrointestinal side effects [ | |
| Atomoxetine | Norepinephrine uptake inhibitor approved for Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder | Phase II/III (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| BI 425809 | Glycine transporter inhibitor; Modulate NMDA receptor function | Phase II (early AD) | Ongoing |
| Latrepirdine (Dimebon) | Anti-histamine | Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| S47445 | AMPARs positive allosteric modulator | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| Sembragiline | Monoamine oxidase B (MAOB) inhibitor | Phase II (moderate to severe AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
Late stage clinical trials: Disease modifying treatments targeting Aβ and tau proteins
| Drug | Treatment/Target | Clinical Trial Information | Results |
| Etazolate | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | No significant differences between treatment groups during 3 months of treatment [ | |
| Atabecestat | BACE inhibitor | Phase II/III (asymptomatic people at risk of developing Alzheimer’s dementia) | Liver toxicity [ |
| CNP520 | BACE inhibitor | Phase II/III (cognitively normal, homozygous | Ongoing |
| Elenbecestat | BACE inhibitor | Two Phase III trials (biomarker-confirmed MCI due to AD/prodromal AD) | Ongoing |
| Lanabecestat | BACE inhibitor | Phase III (early AD; mild dementia) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| LY3202626 | BACE inhibitor | Phase II (mild AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| Phase II (early AD) in combination with LY3002813 | Terminated (results not published) | ||
| Verubecestat | BACE inhibitor | Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy in both mild to moderate AD and in prodromal patients; Dermatological and behavioral side effects [ |
| Phase III (prodromal AD) | |||
| Scyllo-inositol (ELND005) | Aβ aggregation | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Serious adverse events at higher doses [ |
| Avagacestat | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Serious side effects [ | |
| r-flurbiprofen (Flurizan) | Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy; Poor bioavailability [ | |
| Semagacestat | Phase III (mild to moderate) | Increased risk of skin cancer and infections; Lack of efficacy [ | |
| Aducanumab | Aggregated Aβ | Two Phase III (MCI due to AD or mild AD ascertained by a positive amyloid PET scan) | Terminated due to lack of efficacy [ |
| BAN2401 | Aβ clearance | Phase III (MCI due to AD) | Did achieve primary endpoint at 18 months, but question regarding |
| Bapineuzumab | Aβ clearance | Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy; ARIA vasogenic edema in |
| Crenezumab | Aggregated Aβ | Phase III (prodromal to mild AD) | Terminated due to lack of efficacy [ |
| Phase II (prevention trial in presymptomatic | Ongoing | ||
| IVIg (Gammagard) | Aβ clearance | Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| Gantenerumab | Aβ clearance | Phase II/III (prodromal AD) | Lack of efficacy; Dose and |
| Phase II/III (asymptomatic and very mildly symptomatic carriers of | Higher dose Phase III trial in mild AD and prevention trial are ongoing | ||
| Phase III (mild AD) | |||
| LY3002813 | Aggregated Aβ | Phase II (early AD; mild dementia) | Ongoing |
| Solanezumab | Soluble Aβ | Three Phase III (mild AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| Phase III (prodromal AD) | Lack of efficacy [ | ||
| Two Phase II/III prevention trials (asymptomatic or very mildly symptomatic people and asymptomatic and very mildly symptomatic carriers of | A4 trial completed (results not published) | ||
| CAD106 | Aβ | Phase III (asymptomatic | Ongoing |
| ACI-24 | Aβ | Phase I/II | Ongoing |
| BIIB092 | Tau | Phase II (mild cognitive impairment due to AD or mild AD) | Ongoing |
| C2N 8E12 | Tau | Phase II (early AD) | Ongoing |
| AADvac-1 | Tau | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Ongoing |
| LY3303560 | Tau | Phase II (early AD) | Ongoing |
| Methylene Blue (LMTM) | Tau | Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| RO7105705 | Tau | Phase II (prodromal to mild AD) | Ongoing |
Late stage clinical trials: Disease modifying treatments targeting inflammation
| Drug | Description/Target | Clinical Trial Information | Results |
| Cromolyn sodium and ibuprofen (ALZT-OP1) | Aβ aggregation and inflammation | Phase III (early AD) | Ongoing |
| Azeliragon | RAGE inhibitor (Aβ and inflammation) | Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy; Tolerance issues at higher doses in a Phase II trial [ |
| CHF 5074 | Two Phase II studies (amnestic or non-amnestic MCI) | Discontinued | |
| Celecoxib (Celebrex) | NSAID | Prevention trial (70 years and older with family history of dementia) | Risk of cardiovascular side effects; Lack of efficacy [ |
| Etanercept (Enbrel) | TNF- | Phase II (mild to moderate) | Known side effects (gastroenteritis, respiratory and urinary-tract infections, pharyngitis, and cellulitis; Lack of efficacy [ |
| r-flurbiprofen (Flurizan) | NSAID | Phase II/III (probable AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| Sargramostim | Hematopoietic growth factor | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| GRF6019 | Young adult plasma | Phase II (mild and moderate AD) | Ongoing |
| IVIg (Gammagard) | Human plasma antibodies | Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| Ibuprofen | NSAID | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Known side effects at high chronic dose. Lack of efficacy [ |
| Lornoxicam | NSAID | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Terminated; data not available. |
| Minocycline | Inflammation and tau | Phase II (MCI and AD) | Data not available |
| Naproxen | NSAID | Prevention trial (people 70 with family history of dementia) | Risk of cardiovascular side effects; Lack of efficacy [ |
| Phase III (mild to moderate AD) | |||
| Neflamapimod | Inflammation | Phase II (MCI and mild AD) | Ongoing |
| IVIg (Octagam®10%) | Inflammation | Phase II (amnestic MCI due to AD) | Lack of efficacy; Transient cognitive improvement reported [ |
| Pioglitazone | Inflammation | Phase III (cognitively normal participants with genetic predisposition) | Ongoing |
| Prednisone | Corticosteroid | Phase II (patients with AD) | Lack of efficacy; Behavioral symptoms and an increase in blood glucose levels reported [ |
| Rofecoxib | NSAID | Phase II (mild to moderate AD) | Lack of efficacy [ |
| Withdrawn from market due to increased risk of heart attack and stroke associated with long-term, high-dosage use | |||
| Thalidomide (Thalomid) | Aβ and inflammation | Phase II/III (mild to moderate AD) | High therapeutic dose known to cause serious birth defects. Poor safety and tolerability in AD patients [ |
Discontinued clinical trails targeting Aβ: Adverse events and toxicity
| Drug | Description/Target | Results |
| AAB-003 | Aβ | ARIA and microhemorrhages [ |
| AN-1792 | Aβ | Brain inflammation [ |
| Atabecestat | BACE inhibitor | Elevated liver enzymes [ |
| Avagacestat | Gastrointestinal and dermatological side effects; Nonmelanoma skin cancers reported; ARIA [ | |
| Azeliragon | RAGE inhibitor | High dose was associated with confusion, falls, and greater ADAS-cog decline; Low dose was not effective in subsequent trials [ |
| LY2886721 | BACE inhibitor | Abnormal liver biochemistry values [ |
| Semagacestat | Increased risk of skin cancer and infections [ | |
| Bexarotene | Retinoid (Aβ) | Increased blood lipid levels, risk of cardiovascular side effects [ |
| Bapineuzumab | Aβ clearance | Reversible vasogenic edema |