| Literature DB >> 34585212 |
J Cummings1, P Aisen, L G Apostolova, A Atri, S Salloway, M Weiner.
Abstract
Aducanumab has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for treatment of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Clinicians require guidance on the appropriate use of this new therapy. An Expert Panel was assembled to construct Appropriate Use Recommendations based on the participant populations, conduct of the pivotal trials of aducanumab, updated Prescribing Information, and expert consensus. Aducanumab is an amyloid-targeting monoclonal antibody delivered by monthly intravenous infusions. The pivotal trials included patients with early AD (mild cognitive impairment due to AD and mild AD dementia) who had confirmed brain amyloid using amyloid positron tomography. The Expert Panel recommends that use of aducanumab be restricted to this population in which efficacy and safety have been studied. Aducanumab is titrated to a dose of 10 mg/kg over a 6-month period. The Expert Panel recommends that the aducanumab be titrated to the highest dose to maximize the opportunity for efficacy. Aducanumab can substantially increase the incidence of amyloid-related imaging abnormalities (ARIA) with brain effusion or hemorrhage. Dose interruption or treatment discontinuation is recommended for symptomatic ARIA and for moderate-severe ARIA. The Expert Panel recommends MRIs prior to initiating therapy, during the titration of the drug, and at any time the patient has symptoms suggestive of ARIA. Recommendations are made for measures less cumbersome than those used in trials for the assessment of effectiveness in the practice setting. The Expert Panel emphasized the critical importance of engaging in a process of patient-centered informed decision-making that includes comprehensive discussions and clear communication with the patient and care partner regarding the requirements for therapy, the expected outcome of therapy, potential risks and side effects, and the required safety monitoring, as well as uncertainties regarding individual responses and benefits.Entities:
Keywords: ARIA; Aduhelm™; Alzheimer’s disease; MRI; aducanumab; amyloid imaging; appropriate use; titration
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34585212 PMCID: PMC8835345 DOI: 10.14283/jpad.2021.41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Prev Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 2274-5807
Clinical trial enrollment criteria and appropriate use criteria for aducanumab in clinical practice
| Participant Feature | Clinical Trial Enrollment Criteria | Appropriate Use in Clinical Practice |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 50-85 | Younger or older patients meeting all other criteria for treatment could be considered candidates for aducanumab |
| Diagnosis | Clinical criteria for MCI due to AD or mild AD dementia | Clinical criteria for MQ due to AD or mild AD dementia |
| Scale scores at baseline | CDR Global Score 0.5; MMSE 24-30; RBANS Delayed Memory Score of 85 or less | MMSE 21-30 or equivalent such as MoCA 17-30 |
| Amyloid status | Amyloid positive PET (visual read) | Amyloid positive PET (visual read) or CSF findings consistent with AD |
| Genetic testing | Consent for APOE genotyping | Genotyping should be discussed with the patient/care partner. ARIA risk should be described, and the patient’s preferences assessed. |
| Neurological examination | Non-AD neurological disorders, stroke, and TIA excluded | Non-AD neurological disorders excluded |
| Cardiovascular history | Angina; myocardial infarction; congestive heart failure excluded | Stable cardiovascular conditions required; clinical decision can be exercised on the ability of the patient to participate safely with the therapeutic regimen |
| Medical history | Excluded: clinically significant systemic illness; diabetes than cannot be managed; uncontrolled hypertension (systolic > 165; diastolic > 100); history of cancer unless in remission for 5 years or localized to skin or prostate; impaired liver function; hepatitis; HIV infection | Stable medical conditions required; clinical decision can be exercised on the ability of the patient to participate safely with the therapeutic regimen |
| Psychiatric history | Unstable psychiatric illness in the past 6 months; alcohol or substance abuse in the past year; use of cannabinoids; positive urine tests for excluded substances | Must be stable psychiatrically; clinical decision can be exercised on the ability of the patient to participate safely with the therapeutic regimen |
| Reproductive status | Female subjects who are pregnant or breast feeding excluded; female subjects who are of childbearing age must be practicing contraception | Female subjects who are pregnant or breast feeding excluded; female subjects who are of childbearing age must be practicing contraception |
| Clotting status | Bleeding disorders, anticoagulants excluded | Patients on anticoagulants are excluded |
| Concomitant medications | Cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine allowed | Patients can be on standard of care with cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine |
| Baseline MRI | Baseline MRI finding that excluded participation: acute or subacute hemorrhage, macrohemorrhage, greater than 4 microhemorrhages, cortical infarction (>1.5 cm), 1 lacunar infarction (>1.5 cm), superficial siderosis, or diffuse white matter disease | Patients should be excluded if there is evidence of acute or subacute hemorrhage, macrohemorrhage, greater than 4 microhemorrhages, cortical infarction (>1.5 cm), 1 lacunar infarction (>1.5 cm), > 1 area of superficial siderosis, or diffuse white matter disease |
| Care support | Reliable informant or care partner | May be living independently or with a care partner |
| Informed consent | Must be signed by participant and care partner | Patient and care partner must understand the nature and requirements of therapy (e.g, monthly infusions to be performed indefinitely) and the expected outcome of therapy (slowing of decline of clinical features) |
Aß – amyloid beta protein; AD – Alzheimer’s disease; APOE – apolipoprotein E; CDR – Clinical Dementia Rating; cm – centimeter; CSF – cerebrospinal fluid; HIV – human immunodeficiency virus; MMSE – Mini Mental State Examination; MoCA – Montreal Cognitive Assessment; MRI – magnetic resonance imaging; PET – positron emission tomography; RBANS – Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status; TIA – transient ischemic attack
Criteria for a positive amyloid PET for the three approved amyloid PET tracers (from drugs@FDA: FDA-Approved Drugs)
| PET Tracer | Criteria for Interpreting as a Positive Scan |
|---|---|
| Florbetapir (Amyvid™) | A positive scan will have either: Two or more brain areas (each larger than a single cortical gyrus) in which there is reduced or absent gray-white contrast; OR, one or more areas in which gray matter radioactivity is intense and clearly exceeds radioactivity in adjacent white matter. |
| Florbetaben (Neuraceq™) | β-amyloid positive - smaller area(s) of tracer uptake equal to or higher than that present in white matter extending beyond the white matter rim to the outer cortical margin involving the majority of the slices within at least one of the four brain regions (“moderate” β-amyloid deposition), or a large confluent area of tracer uptake equal to or higher than that present in white matter extending beyond the white matter rim to the outer cortical margin and involving the entire region including the majority of slices within at least one of the four brain regions. |
| Flutemetamol (Vizamyl™) | Positive scans show at least one cortical region with reduction or loss of the normally distinct grey-white matter contrast. These scans have one or more regions with increased cortical grey matter signal (above 50-60% peak intensity) and/or reduced (or absent) grey- white matter contrast (white matter sulcal pattern is less distinct). A positive scan may have one or more regions in which grey matter radioactivity is as intense or exceeds the intensity in adjacent white matter. |
Figure 1.Aducanumab dosing and MRI monitoring schedule (Prescribing Information (1) and Expert Panel recommendation; © J Cummings; illustrator M de la Flor, PhD)
Occurrence of ARIA in the entire population and in participants with and without the APOE-4 allele in the two pivotal trials combined (10 mg/kg dose) (5)
| Participant Group | Placebo | Aducanumab |
|---|---|---|
| ARIA-E and ARIA-H (overall population) | 10% | 41% |
| ARIA-E (overall population) | 2.7% | 35.2% |
| ARIA-E with symptoms | 10.3% | 26% |
| ARIA-H (overall population) | 8.7% | 28.3% |
| ARIA-E APOE-4 carriers | 2.2% | 43% |
| ARIA-E APOE-4 noncarriers | 3.9% | 20.3% |
| Trial discontinuations due to ARIA | 0.6% | 6.2% |
Figure 2.Management strategy for ARIA. Patients with severe symptomatic ARIA are not re-titrated and are not candidates for further treatment with aducanumab (Expert Panel recommendation; © J Cummings; illustrator M de la Flor, PhD)
MRI severity levels of ARIA-E and ARIA-H as described in the aducanumab Prescribing Information (1)
| ARIA-Type | Mild | Moderate | Severe |
|---|---|---|---|
| ARIA-E | FLAIR hyperintensity confined to sulcus and or cortex/subcortical white matter in one location < 5 cm | FLAIR hyperintensity 5 to 10 cm, or more than 1 site of involvement, each measuring <10 cm | FLAIR hyperintensity measuring > 10 cm, often with significant subcortical white matter / sulcal involvement. May involve one or more separate sites |
| ARIA-H microhemorrhage | ≤ 4 new microhemorrhages | 5 to 9 new microhemorrhages | 10 or more new microhemorrhages |
| ARIA-H superficial siderosis | 1 focal area of superficial siderosis | 2 focal areas of superficial siderosis | > 2 focal areas of superficial siderosis |
Resources needed for the appropriate use of aducanumab (Expert Panel Recommendations)
|
Clinicians skilled in the detection and recognition of early AD Amyloid PET access or access to individuals with lumbar puncture expertise Experts in amyloid PET interpretation or CLIA-certified laboratory available for CSF measurements Infusion resources (office/clinic; general infusion center; AD-specific infusion center; home infusion with visiting nurse) MRI access Experts proficient in recognition of ARIA on MRI Experts proficient in clinical recognition and management of ARIA Family and patient education and support resources Clinicians and staff who deliver culturally competent care Genetic counseling available for patients with questions regarding implications of APOE genotyping and interpretation of genetic testing |