Hope for Alzheimer's vaccine
Hints emerge that
doomed jab did some good.
22 May 2003
HELEN
PEARSON
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| Elan's
Alzheimer's vaccine trial was
halted in January 2002. |
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GettyImages |
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A controversial vaccine may stall Alzheimer's disease, despite
having serious side-effects, new research suggests. The study
revives optimism that a tweaked version of the shot could reach the
clinic.
Early hopes for the vaccine died in January 2002, when a handful
of patients in a clinical trial of the treatment developed brain
inflammation. The results forced Elan, the Dublin-based company
behind the vaccine, to stop the tests.
Now a team led by Roger Nitsch of the University of Zurich in
Switzerland has released the first data on how patients fared after
immunization. Independently of Elan, the researchers monitored 30
patients in the clinical trial after it stopped1.
Two-thirds of them did not deteriorate as expected, Nitsch's team
found, on ratings that measure ability to dress, cook and lead
normal lives. In memory tests, some "were even better than before
the start of the study", says Nitsch.
Although the results must be confirmed in the remainder of the
372 trial participants, they suggest that a modified version of the
vaccine might yet prove successful. "It revives hope" in the
concept, says Alzheimer's researcher Bengt Winblad of the Karolinska
Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.
Twist in the tale
Elan's vaccine aims to turn the body's immune system against
accumulations of twisted protein called ß-amyloid in the brain.
These unwanted clumps - called plaques - are characteristic of
Alzheimer's disease and are thought to cause dementia.
Patients were injected with ß-amyloid to encourage the body to
make antibodies against the protein. These should latch onto the
plaques, tagging them for destruction by other immune cells.
Nitsch's group found antibodies against ß-amyloid in the blood of
20 of the 30 patients who were tested. Because the trial was
'blinded', the team does not yet know which were given the vaccine
and which received placebo injections. But those that made
antibodies are the ones most likely to have been vaccinated - and
they showed the least deterioration.
Analyses at Elan have not found the same benefit in the entire
set of patients, warns the company's chief scientific and medical
officer, Ivan Lieberburg. "We have to be very cautious," he says.
But unlike Nitsch, Elan scientists did not investigate whether
patients' antibodies actually bound to ß-amyloid plaques in brain
slices. This might account for the difference, says Lieberburg.
Similar experiments are now under way at Elan.
Brain power
Even if the vaccine is working, it is useless until scientists
can understand and avert the life-threatening inflammation. They
suspect that the presence of ß-amyloid fragments prompted
inflammatory cells to attack the brain.
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It revives hope
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Bengt Winblad
Karolinska Institute
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One way to solve this problem might be to snip off a portion of
ß-amyloid that rouses inflammation, leaving intact the part that
stimulates antibody production. Another could be to inject patients
with ready-made antibodies against ß-amyloid.
Elan and other firms are investigating the approaches - both of
which will require fresh clinical trials over several years. "I
think this is getting exciting again," says Nitsch, " but anyone
could get a side-effect and you're back to zero". |