Literature DB >> 35542991

Two Randomized Phase 3 Studies of Aducanumab in Early Alzheimer's Disease.

S Budd Haeberlein1, P S Aisen, F Barkhof, S Chalkias, T Chen, S Cohen, G Dent, O Hansson, K Harrison, C von Hehn, T Iwatsubo, C Mallinckrodt, C J Mummery, K K Muralidharan, I Nestorov, L Nisenbaum, R Rajagovindan, L Skordos, Y Tian, C H van Dyck, B Vellas, S Wu, Y Zhu, A Sandrock.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Alzheimer's disease is a progressive, irreversible, and fatal disease for which accumulation of amyloid beta is thought to play a key role in pathogenesis. Aducanumab is a human monoclonal antibody directed against aggregated soluble and insoluble forms of amyloid beta.
OBJECTIVES: We evaluated the efficacy and safety of aducanumab in early Alzheimer's disease.
DESIGN: EMERGE and ENGAGE were two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, global, phase 3 studies of aducanumab in patients with early Alzheimer's disease.
SETTING: These studies involved 348 sites in 20 countries. PARTICIPANTS: Participants included 1638 (EMERGE) and 1647 (ENGAGE) patients (aged 50-85 years, confirmed amyloid pathology) who met clinical criteria for mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer's disease or mild Alzheimer's disease dementia, of which 1812 (55.2%) completed the study. INTERVENTION: Participants were randomly assigned 1:1:1 to receive aducanumab low dose (3 or 6 mg/kg target dose), high dose (10 mg/kg target dose), or placebo via IV infusion once every 4 weeks over 76 weeks. MEASUREMENTS: The primary outcome measure was change from baseline to week 78 on the Clinical Dementia Rating Sum of Boxes (CDR-SB), an integrated scale that assesses both function and cognition. Other measures included safety assessments; secondary and tertiary clinical outcomes that assessed cognition, function, and behavior; and biomarker endpoints.
RESULTS: EMERGE and ENGAGE were halted based on futility analysis of data pooled from the first approximately 50% of enrolled patients; subsequent efficacy analyses included data from a larger data set collected up to futility declaration and followed prespecified statistical analyses. The primary endpoint was met in EMERGE (difference of -0.39 for high-dose aducanumab vs placebo [95% CI, -0.69 to -0.09; P=.012; 22% decrease]) but not in ENGAGE (difference of 0.03, [95% CI, -0.26 to 0.33; P=.833; 2% increase]). Results of biomarker substudies confirmed target engagement and dose-dependent reduction in markers of Alzheimer's disease pathophysiology. The most common adverse event was amyloid-related imaging abnormalities-edema.
CONCLUSIONS: Data from EMERGE demonstrated a statistically significant change across all four primary and secondary clinical endpoints. ENGAGE did not meet its primary or secondary endpoints. A dose- and time-dependent reduction in pathophysiological markers of Alzheimer's disease was observed in both trials.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Aducanumab; Alzheimer’s disease; amyloid beta

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35542991     DOI: 10.14283/jpad.2022.30

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Prev Alzheimers Dis        ISSN: 2274-5807


  14 in total

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Journal:  Neurol Ther       Date:  2022-07-31

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Authors:  Edward D Plowey; Thierry Bussiere; Raj Rajagovindan; Jennifer Sebalusky; Stefan Hamann; Christian von Hehn; Carmen Castrillo-Viguera; Alfred Sandrock; Samantha Budd Haeberlein; Christopher H van Dyck; Anita Huttner
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Review 9.  Biomarkers for Alzheimer's Disease: Context of Use, Qualification, and Roadmap for Clinical Implementation.

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