By India Blooms News Service Nov 30, 2022
London: The first drug to slow the destruction of the brain in Alzheimers has been heralded as momentous.
The research breakthrough ends decades of failure and shows a new era of drugs to treat Alzheimers -- the most common form of dementia -- is possible, BBC reported.
Yet the medicine, lecanemab, has only a small effect and its impact on peoples daily lives is debated.
And the drug works in the early stages of the disease, so most would miss out without a revolution in spotting it, the BBC said.
Lecanemab attacks the sticky gunge -- called beta amyloid -- that builds up in the brains of people with Alzheimers.
For a medical field littered with duds, despair and disappointment, some see these trial results as a triumphant turning point.
Alzheimers Research UK said the findings were momentous.
One of the worlds leading researchers behind the whole idea of targeting amyloid 30 years ago, Prof John Hardy, said it was historic and was optimistic were seeing the beginning of Alzheimers therapies, the BBC reported.
Prof Tara Spires-Jones, from the University of Edinburgh, said the results were a big deal because weve had a 100 per cent failure rate for a long time.
Currently, people with Alzheimers are given other drugs to help manage their symptoms, but none change the course of the disease.
(With UNI inputs)