| Literature DB >> 35300725 |
Chenghuan Song1,2, Jiyun Shi1,2, Pingao Zhang1,2, Yongfang Zhang1,2, Jianrong Xu1,3, Lanxue Zhao1,2, Rui Zhang1,2, Hao Wang4,5,6,7, Hongzhuan Chen8,9,10.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative disease in the elderly worldwide. However, the complexity of AD pathogenesis leads to discrepancies in the understanding of this disease, and may be the main reason for the failure of AD drug development. Fortunately, many ongoing preclinical and clinical studies will continually open up avenues to unravel disease mechanisms and guide strategies for AD diagnosis and drug development. For example, immunotherapeutic strategies targeting amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau proteins were once deemed almost certainly effective in clinical treatment due to the excellent preclinical results. However, the repeated failures of clinical trials on vaccines and humanized anti-Aβ and anti-tau monoclonal antibodies have resulted in doubts on this strategy. Recently, a new anti-Aβ monoclonal antibody (Aducanumab) has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, which brings us back to the realization that immunotherapy strategies targeting Aβ may be still promising. Meanwhile, immunotherapies based on other targets such as tau, microglia and gut-brain axis are also under development. Further research is still needed to clarify the forms and epitopes of targeted proteins to improve the accuracy and effectiveness of immunotherapeutic drugs. In this review, we focus on the immunotherapies based on Aβ, tau and microglia and their mechanisms of action in AD. In addition, we present up-to-date advances and future perspectives on immunotherapeutic strategies for AD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Antibody; Drug development; Immunotherapy; Vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35300725 PMCID: PMC8932191 DOI: 10.1186/s40035-022-00292-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Neurodegener ISSN: 2047-9158 Impact factor: 8.014
Fig. 1Immunotherapy strategies targeting Aβ. Aβ immunotherapies are classified by the mechanism of action, Aβ domain targets and progress of development
Immunotherapies targeting Aβ in AD drug development
| Therapeutic strategy | Drug | Mechanism | Sponsor | Study population | Admin | Phase | Results | Clinical Trial Identifier | Start date | Estimated end date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Active immunotherapy | AN1792 | Vaccination | Janssen/Pfizer | Mild to moderate AD | IM | II | Terminated | NCT00021723 | 2001 Sept | 2003 Sept |
Amilomotide (CAD106) | Vaccination | Novartis | Participants at risk of the onset of clinical symptoms of AD | IM | II/III | Terminated | NCT02565511 | 2015 Nov | 2020 Apr | |
| UB-311 | Vaccination | United Neuro-science | Mild AD | IM | II | Completed | NCT02551809 | 2015 Oct | 2018 Aug | |
| Mild AD | II | Terminated | NCT03531710 | 2018 Aug | 2019 Oct | |||||
| ABvac40 | Vaccination | Araclon Biotech | Participants with amnestic mild cognitive impairment or very mild AD | SC | II | Active, not recruiting | NCT03461276 | 2018 Feb | 2022 Dec | |
| Passive immunotherapy | Solanezumab (LY2062430) | Monoclonal antibody | Eli Lilly | Mild to moderate AD | IV | III | Completed | NCT00905372 | 2009 May | 2012 Apr |
| Mild to moderate AD | Completed | NCT00904683 | 2009 May | 2012 Jun | ||||||
| Mild to moderate AD | Terminated | NCT01127633 | 2010 Dec | 2017 Feb | ||||||
| Mild AD | III | Terminated | NCT01900665 | 2013 Jul | 2016 Oct | |||||
| Prodromal AD | III | Terminated | NCT02760602 | 2016 Jun | 2017 May | |||||
| Participants at risk of memory loss | III | Active, not recruiting | NCT02008357 | 2014 Feb | 2022 Dec | |||||
| Gantenerumab | Monoclonal antibody | Roche | Prodromal AD | IV | Completed | NCT01224106 | 2010 Nov | 2020 Sept | ||
| Mild AD | Completed | NCT02051608 | 2014 Mar | 2021 Apr | ||||||
| Prodromal to mild AD | Recruiting | NCT04374253 | 2014 Mar | 2021 Apr | ||||||
| Early AD | Recruiting | NCT03444870 | 2018 Jun | 2023 Nov | ||||||
| Early AD | Active, not recruiting | NCT03443973 | 2018 Aug | 2022 Sept | ||||||
| Early AD | Active, not recruiting | NCT04339413 | 2020 May | 2023 Apr | ||||||
Aducanumab (BIIB037) | Monoclonal antibody | Biogen | Early AD | IV | III | Terminated | NCT02484547 | 2015 Sept | 2019 Aug | |
| Early AD | III | Terminated | NCT02477800 | 2015 Aug | 2019 Aug | |||||
| Early AD | III | Active, not recruiting | NCT04241068 | 2020 Mar | 2023 Oct | |||||
Crenezumab (RG7412) | Monoclonal antibody | Roche/AC Immune SA | Prodromal to mild AD | IV | III | Terminated | NCT02670083 | 2016 Mar | 2019 May | |
| Prodromal to mild AD | III | Terminated | NCT03114657 | 2017 Mar | 2019 Jun | |||||
| Prodromal to mild AD | III | Terminated | NCT03491150 | 2018 Apr | 2019 May | |||||
Lecanemab (BAN2401) | Monoclonal antibody | Biogen /Eisai | Early AD | IV | III | Recruiting | NCT03887455 | 2019 Mar | 2024 Aug | |
| Preclinical AD | III | Recruiting | NCT04468659 | 2020 Jul | 2027 Oct | |||||
Donanemab (LY3002813) | Monoclonal antibody | Eli Lilly | Early symptomatic AD | IV | III | Recruiting | NCT04437511 | 2020 Jun | 2023 Dec | |
| Preclinical AD | III | Recruiting | NCT05026866 | 2021 Aug | 2027 Sept |
AD, Alzheimer’s disease; Admin, Route of administration; SC, subcutaneous; IM, intramuscular; IV, intravenous
Fig. 2Immunotherapy strategies targeting tau. Tau immunotherapies, including active vaccines and passive antibodies, are shown based on their target region or site
Therapeutic strategies targeting tau in AD drug development
| Therapeutic strategy | Drug | Mechanism | Sponsor | Study population | Admin | Phase | Results | Clinical Trial Identifier | Start date | Estimated end date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Active immunotherapy | AADvac1 | Active vaccine | Axon Neuro- science SE | Mild AD | IV | II | Completed | NCT02579252 | 2016 Mar | 2019 Jun |
| ACI-35 | Active vaccine | AC Immune SA, Janssen | Early AD | IV | I/II | Recruiting | NCT04445831 | 2019 Jul | 2023 Oct | |
| Passive immunotherapy | RG7345 (RO6926496) | Monoclonal antibody | Discontinued | Healthy | IV | I | Completed | NCT02281786 | 2015 Jan | 2015 Oct |
BIIB076 (NI-105) | Monoclonal antibody | Biogen | Healthy and AD | IV | I | Completed | NCT03056729 | 2017 Feb | 2020 Mar | |
Semorinemab (RO7105704) | Monoclonal antibody | Genentech | Mild AD | IV | II | Completed | NCT03289143 | 2017 Oct | 2021 Jan | |
| Genentech | Moderate AD | IV | II | Active, not recruiting | NCT03828747 | 2019 Jan | 2023 Oct | |||
Tilavonemab (ABBV-8E12) | Monoclonal antibody | AbbVie | Early AD | IV | II | Completed | NCT02880956 | 2016 Oct | 2021 Jul | |
| AbbVie | Early AD | IV | II | Active, not recruiting | NCT03712787 | 2019 Mar | 2021 Jul | |||
Zagotenemab (LY3303560) | Monoclonal antibody | Eli Lilly | Early AD | IV | II | Active, not recruiting | NCT03518073 | 2018 Apr | 2021 Oct | |
Gosuranemab (BIIB092) | Monoclonal antibody | Biogen, | Mild AD | IV | II | Terminated | NCT03352557 | 2018 May | 2021 Aug | |
| PNT001 | Monoclonal antibody | Pinteon Therapeutics | Healthy | IV | I | Completed | NCT04096287 | 2019 Sept | 2021 Feb | |
| Lu AF87908 | Monoclonal antibody | H. Lundbeck | Healthy and AD | IV | I | Recruiting | NCT04149860 | 2019 Sept | 2022 Jul | |
| JNJ-63733657 | Monoclonal antibody | Janssen | Early AD | IV | II | Recruiting | NCT04619420 | 2021 Jan | 2025 Mar | |
| E2814 | Monoclonal antibody | Eisai | Mild to moderate AD | IV | I/II | Recruiting | NCT04971733 | 2021 Jun | 2024 Apr | |
Bepranemab (UCB0107) | Monoclonal antibody | Hoffmann La Roche, UCB S.A | Mild cognitive impairment or mild AD | IV | II | Recruiting | NCT04867616 | 2021 Jun | 2025 Nov |
AD, Alzheimer’s disease; Admin, Route of administration; IV, intravenous
Fig. 3Immunotherapies for AD in ongoing clinical trials. Immunotherapies for different stages of AD progression are shown. Most of the current immunization therapies target the early phase of AD