| Strategy to control ALZHEIMER'S
|
2005-03-28 10:39:29 Ann Geracimos, THE WASHINGTON POST
There is nothing
easy where Alzheimer's is concerned -- neither the research work nor
the patient care. A memory disorder disease that affects nearly 5
million Americans and is expected to affect 14 million by 2050, its
cause is unknown and treatment methods on the market are palliative
at best.
But
scientists in recent years have at least been able to report
encouraging results from ongoing studies that could help determine
the cause of the disease and provide a likely cure.
The
clinical trials that must precede formal approval of new treatment
drugs are done at sites around the country and involve human
volunteers willing to help test new approaches.
Nine
of these currently are under way at Georgetown University Medical
Center's Memory Disorders Clinic, a regional leader in the effort,
which actively solicits recruits who meet the necessary guidelines.
The clinic was founded in 1999 by Dr. Paul Aisen, professor of
neurology and medicine and a prominent researcher in the field.
On
the front lines, too, are therapists such as Elizabeth Cockey, who
works in several Baltimore nursing homes to help moderately and
severely afflicted patients lead better lives and keep the disease at
bay. Ms. Cockey, author of a book about her experiences called
"Gertrude's Cupboard," uses art projects to stimulate
patients' mental and physical capacities -- a form of behavior
modification she says can show results in a person within six months.
"When
you do art, every part of the brain lights up," she says. "We
create new neurological pathways," she claims, while
acknowledging she has no empirical data to prove her findings -- the
kind of data that is the lifeblood of scientists like Dr. Aisen.
"In
the field of Alzheimer's, up until 1993 there were no treatments,
while over the last 12 years five drugs have been approved by the
[Food and Drug Administration]," he says. "That is a
tremendous development, because we went from a disease always assumed
to be untreatable to a disease that is clearly treatable."
He
was able last July to announce results in a so-called phase-two trial
of a new drug called Alzhemed. The study, done in conjunction with a
small Canadian company called Neurochem, showed that Alzhemed, a
compound, could reduce the levels of a molecule in the brain called
the amyloid peptide. That molecule is believed to be pivotal in the
formation of Alzheimer's.
"Many
groups are focusing on this peptide," he says. "If we want
to change the course of the disease, we think we have to target that
peptide. The majority of our efforts today are not at relieving
symptoms, but targeting the peptide, either by clearing it from the
brain or stopping its production in the brain."
Treatments
known today relieve symptoms, he notes, but don't stop progression of
the disease: "Like a painkiller for arthritis is not doing
anything to protect the joint, but you are relieving symptoms."
The
so-called anti-amyloid strategies represented by the Alzhemed program
were tried out successfully on 50 people -- "the first
demonstration that we were able to actually influence this causative
molecule." The next step is a phase-three trial involving 1,000
people from the United States and Canada that will take at least 18
months.
Determining
whether a drug relieves symptoms is done with memory tests that can
show an impact in a short time. But testing the value of a drug that
might alter the disease's progression requires monitoring subjects
long enough to see a change in the course of the disease, Dr. Aisen
explains.
The
Georgetown Center offers clinical evaluations and treatment services
for all kinds of memory impairment, of which Alzheimer's is just one
-- but the most alarming and difficult one to treat. It also is the
most costly, according to Dr. Aisen. "The economic impact of
Alzheimer's disease today is estimated at 100 billion dollars a year
in the United States," he says.
The
center works in collaboration with the U.S. National Institutes of
Health and private corporations to develop other strategies targeting
the amyloid peptide. Some of the strategies involve setting up
so-called model systems in the lab, using brain cells grown in
culture dishes and then in mice.
The
center also is one of 50 sites in the United States and Canada taking
part in a million five-year public-private project known as the
Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative due to begin next month.
The study, instigated by NIH's National Institute on Aging, will
compare neuroimaging, biological and clinical information in
participants with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's in order
to make better use of these tracking methods.
"What
they are trying to do is diagnose Alzheimer's through scanning, which
can't be done yet," explains Nancy Disan, program manager for
the National Capital chapter of the nonprofit Alzheimer's
Association, the largest private funder of research for the disease.
"Just now it is a 'rule-out' diagnosis -- not a clear-cut one.
The only way to verify [the disease] is an autopsy done on the brain
after death, unlike cancer that you see under a microscope.
"The
earlier we can catch the disease, the better we can treat it,"
she says. "Right now we have to wait for a great amount of
symptoms."
The
researchers' ultimate goal is to learn how to stop the disease from
progressing, Dr. Aisen told an interviewer for National Public Radio
less than two years ago when the FDA approved the first drug --
called memantine -- to treat patients suffering from moderate to
severe Alzheimer's disease. Georgetown had been one of the test
sites.
He
sees as "promising" the number of new compounds now under
study. Also under study is a natural product called huperzine A,
which is extracted from a Chinese herb and taken in pill form.
Another study employs a nicotine patch -- the same one used by people
who are trying to stop smoking. Lab experiments have shown that
delivery of nicotine into the brain might favorably affect the
progression of amyloid-related memory impairment, he explains.
"A
number of trials have not worked out, but it is important to know
what doesn't work as well so people don't take [medicines]
unnecessarily that don't help them," says Neil Buckholtz, chief
of the National Institute of Aging's Dementia of Aging Branch. "You
can't really wait to see what happens to one. You must do a number in
parallel."
http://washingtontimes.com/metro/20050328-103929-3665r.htm
|