| Literature DB >> 36012569 |
Xavier Morató1, Vanesa Pytel1, Sara Jofresa1, Agustín Ruiz1,2, Mercè Boada1,2.
Abstract
Since 1906, when Dr. Alois Alzheimer first described in a patient "a peculiar severe disease process of the cerebral cortex", people suffering from this pathology have been waiting for a breakthrough therapy. Alzheimer's disease (AD) is an irreversible, progressive neurodegenerative brain disorder and the most common form of dementia in the elderly with a long presymptomatic phase. Worldwide, approximately 50 million people are living with dementia, with AD comprising 60-70% of cases. Pathologically, AD is characterized by the deposition of amyloid β-peptide (Aβ) in the neuropil (neuritic plaques) and blood vessels (amyloid angiopathy), and by the accumulation of hyperphosphorylated tau in neurons (neurofibrillary tangles) in the brain, with associated loss of synapses and neurons, together with glial activation, and neuroinflammation, resulting in cognitive deficits and eventually dementia. The current competitive landscape in AD consists of symptomatic treatments, of which there are currently six approved medications: three AChEIs (donepezil, rivastigmine, and galantamine), one NMDA-R antagonist (memantine), one combination therapy (memantine/donepezil), and GV-971 (sodium oligomannate, a mixture of oligosaccharides derived from algae) only approved in China. Improvements to the approved therapies, such as easier routes of administration and reduced dosing frequencies, along with the developments of new strategies and combined treatments are expected to occur within the next decade and will positively impact the way the disease is managed. Recently, Aducanumab, the first disease-modifying therapy (DMT) has been approved for AD, and several DMTs are in advanced stages of clinical development or regulatory review. Small molecules, mAbs, or multimodal strategies showing promise in animal studies have not confirmed that promise in the clinic (where small to moderate changes in clinical efficacy have been observed), and therefore, there is a significant unmet need for a better understanding of the AD pathogenesis and the exploration of alternative etiologies and therapeutic effective disease-modifying therapies strategies for AD. Therefore, a critical review of the disease-modifying therapy pipeline for Alzheimer's disease is needed.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Aβ; disease-modifying therapies; inflammation; tau
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36012569 PMCID: PMC9409252 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23169305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Anti-Aβ protein strategies for the development of DMT. Both active and passive immunotherapy are currently under evaluation for reducing amyloid deposition and related progression of cognitive impairment in AD (polyclonal vs. monoclonal approach). In parallel, other small molecules under study target Aβ upstream preventing Aβ misfolding and the generation of toxic peptides.
Figure 2Anti-Tau strategies for the development of DMT. Passive immunotherapy is the main strategy under evaluation for reducing the cell-to-cell spread of extracellular Tau. At this moment specific phosphor-Tau mAbs are under clinical development. Other strategies such as active vaccination and antisense oligonucleotides to reduce Tau levels are also under evaluation in clinical trials.
Figure 3Anti-inflammatory strategies for the development of DMT. Inflammation plays a central role in AD and at this moment is the main therapeutical strategy in clinical development for AD. Some molecules target specific players of inflammation or microglial activation (such as TNFα, TREM2, or CD33) while others have a broader anti-inflammatory effect (GLP1 agonist, Plasma exchange).