Alzheimer’s Monoclonal Antibodies Fail to Deliver Meaningful Results
The review found the drugs reduced amyloid plaques, but 13 trials showed little to no cognitive benefit and more amyloid-related imaging abnormalities.
5 Articles
5 Articles
Alzheimer’s drugs offer little benefit, major review finds – and the reasons go deeper than the science
PeopleImages/Shutterstock.comHow is it possible to spend tens of billions of dollars developing drugs to treat a serious disease that affects millions of people, and yet end up with something that does not work? This is a mystery that has bedevilled Alzheimer’s research for years. A new review of the evidence has concluded that the leading class of Alzheimer’s drugs “probably result in little to no difference” in a range of measures, including r…
Do anti-amyloid drugs actually work? - Health Care Today
More than 55 million people worldwide are living with Alzheimer’s disease, estimates suggest. Treatment for Alzheimer’s disease currently includes medications, such as anti-amyloid drugs that work to remove amyloid-beta plaques from the brain of those with early Alzheimer’s disease. A new study says that anti-amyloid medications may not have any clinically meaningful positive effects, and may increase the risk of swelling and bleeding in the bra…
Berlin – The German Society for Neurology (DGN) warns against dismissing the approach of using beta-amyloid antibodies against Alzheimer's disease as a dead end in research. "Randomized studies of the already approved amyloid antibodies have shown an effect – although not the hoped-for breakthrough against Alzheimer's," the society stated...
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 100% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

