Bradford (England): Around 55 million people, globally, have dementia the most common type being Alzheimer's disease. Unfortunately, there is no cure for the memory-robbing disease. But a lot of hope was pinned on an experimental drug called gantenerumab. A press release, recently issued by the drug's maker, Roche, did not bring good news. The injectable drug had no meaningful effect on either the symptoms of Alzheimer's or on the brain markers of the disease a protein called amyloid.
Gantenerumab is an antibody that binds itself to amyloid, a sticky protein that clumps together and accumulates in the brains of those with Alzheimer's. The binding of the antibody to amyloid activates the brain's natural defences, which then removes the amyloid. Smaller trials of gantenerumab supported this approach as there was a positive effect on symptoms and a reduction in amyloid clumps. But the latest large-scale study has failed to replicate this earlier success, once more raising questions about the validity of targeting amyloid.
What causes Alzheimer's disease is still not known, but the most popular explanation is the so-called amyloid cascade hypothesis. Proposed 30 years ago, the hypothesis described a series of events that culminates in Alzheimer's disease. Scientists based the hypothesis on changes they had noticed in the brains of people with Alzheimer's disease as well as on genetic evidence from families where successive generations had developed Alzheimer's.
The changes they noticed in the brain were the accumulation of clumps of amyloid protein called plaques, and the accumulation of tau protein called tangles. The hypothesis posits that the formation of amyloid plaques is the initiating process of the disease. The plaques then interact with other brain cells and blood vessels, impairing their normal function, developing tangles and ultimately killing neurons (brain cells).
Over the past 30 years, scientists have refined the hypothesis as new information on the biological processes underlying Alzheimer's disease were discovered. So targeting amyloid seems a logical focus of drug makers. The disappointing results for gantenerumab are just the latest in a long line of reported failures of drugs that target amyloid clumps. These repeated failures (14 in total), with the few studies reporting positive outcomes (two in total), fuel the debate about whether targeting amyloid removal is a valid approach.