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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved a drug that has been found to help people in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease and is being studied at the University of Kentucky.
Lecanemab, to be marketed as Leqembi, has been approved through an accelerated approval process. It is to be used for Alzheimer's patients who have mild cognitive impairment or are in the mild dementia stage of the disease, the population that was studied in clinical trials -- which showed the treatment effectively removed amyloid beta plaque, a key marker of Alzheimer's disease, from the brain. The phase 3 trial, of nearly 1,800 people with early Alzheimer's and evidence of amyloid, found that those who got lecanemab for 18 months had a 27% slower cognitive decline than those who got a placebo.
The Japanese drug firm Eisai, which developed lecanemab in partnership with Biogen, said in a news release that it will price the treatment at $26,500 per year for bi-weekly doses. The Wall Street Journal reports that lecanemab will be out of reach for most U.S. patients in the coming months because Medicare will only pay for this type of Alzheimer's drug for patients enrolled in a "government-sanctioned clinical trial, and no such studies are ongoing or planned." The Alzheimer's Association patient-advocacy group has asked the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to reconsider its policy.
The trial still needs study participants and researchers want to make sure the opportunity is available to a wide range of the population.
To learn more about the study, call 1-800-AHEAD-70 or to find a trial site location enrolling near you, visit www.AHEADstudy.org. Learn more about enrolling in aging studies at UK's Sanders-Brown Center on Aging here.
from KENTUCKY HEALTH NEWS https://ift.tt/w7x31fC
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