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New Alzheimer’s Drug Clears Milestone in Human Clinical Trial

A brain plaque inhibitor developed by Merck is now being tested in larger studies for efficacy against the still unstoppable neurodegenerative disease

Cerebral autopsy specimen of a patient diagosed having Alzheimer Disease. In the HE stain numerous plaque formations within the neuropil background are visible.

On Monday Pres. Barack Obama proclaimed November “National Alzheimer's Disease Awareness Month.” The administration’s ambitious goal is to prevent and treat Alzheimer's by 2025. Although there are currently no approved therapies that slow or stop progression of the disease, several approaches are showing promise.

In a study published today in Science Translational Medicine, a team from Merck Research Laboratories reports results of early human and animal trials of a drug called verubecestat, which targets the production of protein plaques associated with the disease. “It's a summary of the discovery and early-stage profiling of what we hope is going to be a new therapeutic for Alzheimer's,” says team leader Matthew Kennedy. “It represents well over a decade of investment in this project by many, many scientists.” Definitive conclusions will have to await the results of larger, ongoing phase III clinical trials to assess their efficacy, effectiveness and safety, but the results are promising, experts say.

Verubecestat is a so-called BACE1 inhibitor. BACE1 (for Beta-site Amyloid precursor protein Cleaving Enzyme 1, aka beta-secretase 1) is an enzyme involved in producing amyloid beta, a protein that clumps together, eventually forming the plaques surrounding neurons that are the disease's key hallmark. The amyloid hypothesis of Alzheimer's proposes that the accumulation of amyloid beta aggregates in the brain drives a cascade of biological events leading to neurodegeneration. By blocking BACE1, the hope is this approach could prevent the buildup of these clumps in the first place. But until now, development of these drugs has been hindered by problems finding molecules with the right characteristics, and concerns over theoretical and actual side effects. .


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Amyloid is formed when amyloid precursor protein (APP) is cleaved into pieces by BACE1 and another enzyme called gamma-secretase. APP protrudes from cell membranes into the space between cells, where the enzymes can cut it. Production of amyloid beta involves two snips. First, BACE1 cleaves it some distance from the cell (producing fragments called sAPP beta) then gamma-secretase cuts the remaining stub off at the cell membrane. The fragment released by this cut is amyloid beta. BACE1 inhibitors work by attaching to the enzyme and preventing it from cleaving APP, thereby decreasing production of amyloid. BACE1 was discovered in 1999 by a team led by molecular biologist Robert Vassar, now at Northwestern University, who was not part of this study. Researchers have been studying its function using mice engineered to lack the BACE1 gene, and these studies have revealed numerous consequences including problems with insulation and guidance of neural wiring, retinal pathology and neurodegeneration, raising concerns that BACE1 inhibitor drugs might have side effects. Another challenge was developing molecules big enough to attach to BACE1 but still able to cross the blood–brain barrier. Several candidate drugs have now been developed, but a recent clinical trial was halted due to evidence of liver toxicity.

The Merck team has developed a molecule that appears to overcome these challenges. They tested the drug on animals and found it significantly reduced levels of both amyloid and sAPP beta in the blood, cerebrospinal fluid and brain in a dose-dependent manner. There were no signs of toxicity, even after treatment of up to six months in rats and nine months in monkeys. The only obvious side effect was reduced fur pigmentation in mice and rabbits, although this wasn't seen in monkeys. The researchers then moved on to small, early-stage human trials to assess safety and tolerability and inform the choice of suitable doses for later trials. Verubecestat reduced amyloid and sAPP beta in the cerebrospinal fluid of healthy adults who took the drug for two weeks and patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's who took it for one week. “This is the first detailed report of what a BACE inhibitor does in humans,” says Dennis Selkoe of Harvard University, a leading Alzheimer's researcher who was not involved in the work. “The good news is they didn't see evidence so far of any of the side effects we're concerned about with BACE inhibition.”

This is probably because the doses used did not fully inhibit BACE1 activity, Vassar says. “It might be you only need a little bit of BACE active in the brain and body to prevent side effects.” Another possibility is that some of the consequences for mice lacking BACE1 from birth are developmental effects that don't apply when the enzyme's activity is lowered in adults.

These results helped propel testing to full-blown clinical trials, making verubecestat the first BACE1 inhibitor to reach phase III trials. “It's really the first molecule of its kind to combine [amyloid]-lowering potency with a very positive safety profile that allows us to treat patients for the time needed to determine if there will be clinical benefits on cognition,” Kennedy says. Two trials testing long-term outcomes in patients are ongoing. The first involves roughly 2,000 patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's for 18 months. The second has around 1,500 participants with early signs of Alzheimer's (as indicated by amyloid plaques revealed in positron emission tomography brain scans), for two years. “The big issue is: What will the long-term safety of these drugs be?” Vassar says. “People may have to take these drugs for the rest of their lives, the trials are two years at most; what happens beyond that, as people get older, we have no idea.”

The second trial could prove a crucial test, because a treatment that limits production of amyloid is likely to work best at the earliest stages of the disease. Plaques may start building two decades before symptoms appear, so by the time a diagnosis is given it may be too late for this approach to help. Researchers await results (expected in 2017 and 2019, respectively) eagerly. If participants show slowed decline of cognitive functions together with reduced amyloid, it would provide strong support for the hypothesis that the protein clumps cause Alzheimer's.

But BACE1 inhibitors are not the only game in town. Another approach is antibody therapies. One of these drugs, aducanumab, dramatically reduced amyloid in the brains of patients with mild stages of Alzheimer's in a small trial reported in the September issue of Nature. Some participants also showed slower cognitive decline, although this too awaits confirmation from a larger, ongoing clinical trial. “I'm also encouraged by the aducanumab data,” Selkoe says. “These are all good shots on goal.”

Researchers believe antibody therapies work by “mopping up” existing amyloid aggregates whereas BACE1 inhibitors prevent the protein from being produced, so the two could prove complementary, Vassar says. “There may be hope for healing the brain with such an approach,” he adds. “We can't bring back dead neurons but we might be able to heal the ones that are still alive.”

Other treatments under investigation involve modifying gamma-secretase enzymes, tackling inflammation or targeting the tau protein tangles that occur in Alzheimer's. “Different approaches are necessary, and we envision patients will get multiple treatments once they're approved,” Selkoe says. “For now, none have made it across the finish line.”

Simon Makin is a freelance science journalist based in the U.K. His work has appeared in New Scientist, the Economist, Scientific American and Nature, among others. He covers the life sciences and specializes in neuroscience, psychology and mental health. Follow Makin on Twitter @SimonMakin

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