"The Alzheimer's disease pipeline, marred by decades of failures and underinvestment, is due for big victories," said George Vradenburg, UsAgainstAlzheimer's Co-Founder and Chairman. "Thanks to growing investment from industry leaders, we remain cautiously optimistic that the current crop of late-stage Alzheimer's innovations will bring much-needed solutions to families in the near future."
A novel treatment for Alzheimer's hasn't received FDA approval since 2003 and regulatory approval in Europe since 2002. However, the RA2 analysis confirms significant momentum by industry to forge ahead with Alzheimer's disease innovation. According to the analysis, there has been an 18-percent increase in Phase II drugs (49 to 58) and a 7-percent increase in Phase III drugs (30 to 32) in development from 2016 to 2017.
"There is no silver bullet when it comes to treating Alzheimer's," said Dr. David Morgan, a founding member of RA2 and a distinguished professor of Molecular Pharmacology and Physiology at the University of South Florida. "The more we learn about the underlying Alzheimer's pathology, the closer we get to a cure for a disease that is an enormous burden on patients, caregivers and global health systems."
A recent report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that Alzheimer's deaths have increased by 55 percent during a recent 15-year period (1999-2014). The late-stage Alzheimer's pipeline provides much-needed hope to the 5.5 million Americans with Alzheimer's and their caregivers who are desperate for a treatment or cure.
According to the analysis, six drugs will conclude Phase III trials in 2017. UsAgainstAlzheimer's and ResearchersAgainstAlzheimer's will continue actively tracking the progress of each drug and working across sectors to ensure that clinical trials are efficient and diverse, and that regulatory approaches to approving Alzheimer's drugs are modernized.
As new, potentially life-changing treatments inch closer to regulatory approval, the analysis, a semi-annual snapshot of the state of the Alzheimer's drug pipeline, begs the question: is the global health care system prepared to ensure that people with or at risk of Alzheimer's have access to the latest innovations once they reach the market?
"Alzheimer's is commonly misdiagnosed, and the United States suffers from a shortage of geriatricians - issues that will only grow as the Baby Boomer generation ages," Vradenburg said. "Private- and public-sector leaders will need to work closely with insurers in the coming years to ensure patients have access to these drugs when they are available."
To view RA2's AAIC poster presentation and read the full analysis, click here.
*While authors of the analysis are affiliated with ResearchersAgainstAlzheimer's, the viewpoints published in the analysis may not reflect or represent the opinions or positions of all RA2 members.
UsAgainstAlzheimer's is an innovative, patient-centered non-profit demanding - and delivering - a solution to Alzheimer's. Driven by the suffering of millions of families, UsAgainstAlzheimer's presses for greater urgency from government, industry and the scientific community in the quest for an Alzheimer's cure - accomplishing this through its own patient-centered effective leadership, collaborative advocacy and strategic investments.
ResearchersAgainstAlzheimer's (RA2) is a global network of more than 450 Alzheimer's researchers in the United States and abroad established by UsAgainstAlzheimer's to advocate for greater research funding, policy reform and multi-sector collaboration in order to stop Alzheimer's disease. RA2 believes that an effective treatment for Alzheimer's disease is within reach if government, industry and citizens are willing to commit the resources and work together to disrupt business-as-usual to achieve the 2025 goal set by the United States and the G7.
"A cure for Alzheimer's: a fantasy, a wish, an impossible dream; the same words that were said to Galileo, Edison, Curie, Salk and whoever dreamed up the internet. Yesterday's dream is today's reality." - Trish Vradenburg, Co-Founder and Vice-Chair of UsAgainstAlzheimer's, who passed away in April 2017.