Lilly Alzheimer's Drug Helped Patients in Small Trial
Author: internet - Published 2021-01-11 06:00:00 PM - (230 Reads)Eli Lilly reported that its experimental Alzheimer's drug donanemab slowed the decline in memory and ability to perform daily living activities by 32 percent after 18 months in a small trial, according to the Wall Street Journal . This is compared to participants who received a placebo. Although donanemab did not stop the disease, if the findings hold up, it would suggest the drug can at least slow Alzheimer's progression. Lilly aims to confirm these findings through a larger, 500-subject study. Lilly's Daniel Skovronsky said donanemab was designed to clear amyloid plaques in addition to blocking their accumulation. Investigators also administered subjects a much higher dose of donanemab than researchers had given of earlier anti-amyloid medications. For donanemab's Phase 2 trial, the team enrolled subjects whose brain images indicated both amyloid buildup and tangles of the tau protein. Twenty-seven percent of subjects on donanemab showed signs of fluid accrual in the brain, with 6 percent experiencing symptoms.