December 2024
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Publications (191)
August 2021
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70 Reads
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15 Citations
Journal of Sleep Research
The orexin receptor antagonist suvorexant was previously reported to significantly improve total sleep time (TST), by 28 min per night versus placebo after 4 weeks, in a sleep laboratory polysomnography (PSG) study of patients with Alzheimer's disease and insomnia. The study included an exploratory evaluation of a consumer‐grade wearable “watch” device for assessing sleep that we report on here. Participants who met diagnostic criteria for both probable Alzheimer's disease dementia and insomnia were randomized to suvorexant 10–20 mg (N = 142) or placebo (N = 143) in a double‐blind, 4‐week trial. Patients were provided with a consumer‐grade wearable watch device (Garmin vívosmart® HR) to be worn continuously. Overnight sleep laboratory PSG was performed on three nights: screening, baseline and Night 29 (last dose). Watch treatment effects were assessed by change‐from‐baseline in watch TST at Week 4 (average TST per night). We also analysed Night 29 data only, with watch data restricted to the PSG recording time. In the 193 participants included in the Week 4 watch analysis (suvorexant = 97, placebo = 96), the suvorexant–placebo difference in watch TST was 4 min (p = .622). In patients with usable data for both assessments at the baseline and Night 29 PSG (suvorexant = 57, placebo = 50), the watch overestimated TST compared to PSG (e.g., placebo baseline = 412 min for watch and 265 min for PSG) and underestimated change‐from‐baseline treatment effects: the suvorexant–placebo difference was 20 min for watch TST (p = .405) and 35 min for PSG TST (p = .057). These findings show that the watch was less sensitive than PSG for evaluating treatment effects on TST.
May 2021
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8 Reads
November 2020
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48 Reads
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62 Citations
Brain
In the phase 3 EPOCH trial (Clinicaltrials.gov; NCT01739348), treatment with the BACE inhibitor verubecestat failed to improve cognition in patients with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer’s disease, but was associated with reduced hippocampal volume after 78 weeks as assessed by MRI. The aims of the present exploratory analyses were to: (i) characterize the effect of verubecestat on brain volume by evaluating the time course of volumetric MRI changes for a variety of brain regions; and (ii) understand the mechanism through which verubecestat might cause hippocampal (and other brain region) volume loss by assessing its relationship to measures of amyloid, neurodegeneration, and cognition. Participants were aged 55–85 years with probable Alzheimer’s disease dementia and a Mini Mental State Examination score ≥15 and ≤26. MRIs were obtained at baseline and at Weeks 13, 26, 52 and 78 of treatment. MRIs were segmented using Freesurfer and analysed using a tensor-based morphometry method. PET amyloid data were obtained with 18F-flutemetamol (Vizamyl®) at baseline and Week 78. Standardized uptake value ratios were generated with subcortical white matter as a reference region. Neurofilament light chain in the CSF was assessed as a biomarker of neurodegeneration. Compared with placebo, verubecestat showed increased MRI brain volume loss at Week 13 with no evidence of additional loss through Week 78. The verubecestat-related volumetric MRI loss occurred predominantly in amyloid-rich brain regions. Correlations between amyloid burden at baseline and verubecestat-related volumetric MRI reductions were not significant (r = 0.05 to 0.26, P-values > 0.27). There were no significant differences between verubecestat and placebo in changes from baseline in CSF levels of neurofilament light chain at Week 78 (increases of 7.2 and 14.6 pg/ml for verubecestat versus 19.7 pg/ml for placebo, P-values ≥ 0.1). There was a moderate correlation between volumetric MRI changes and cognitive decline in all groups including placebo at Week 78 (e.g. r = −0.45 to −0.55, P < 0.001 for whole brain), but the correlations were smaller at Week 13 and significant only for the verubecestat groups (e.g. r = −0.15 and −0.11, P < 0.04 for whole brain). Our results suggest that the verubecestat-associated MRI brain volume loss is not due to generalized, progressive neurodegeneration, but may be mediated by specific effects on BACE-related amyloid processes.
November 2020
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33 Reads
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71 Citations
Introduction: The APECS and AMARANTH trials showed that beta-secretase (BACE) inhibitors verubecestat and lanabecestat failed to slow cognitive and functional decline in individuals with prodromal or early Alzheimer's disease. Here, the performance on secondary and exploratory cognitive measures in both studies is reported. Methods: APECS (verubecestat) and AMARANTH (lanabecestat) were randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, 104-week clinical trials conducted by different sponsors. Measures included the 3-Domain Composite Cognition Score (CCS-3D), Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS), Letter/Category Fluency, and Digit Symbol Coding. Results: Verubecestat showed worsening on the CCS-3D Total Score, Episodic Memory, and Attention/Processing Speed domains. Lanabecestat showed worsening on the RBANS Total Score, Immediate Memory, and Visuospatial/Constructional Indexes. Both BACE inhibitors showed worsening on Digit Symbol Coding and improvements on Letter/Category Fluency. Discussion: In both studies, many measures showed treatment-associated cognitive worsening, whereas verbal fluency tasks showed improvement.
January 2020
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87 Reads
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3 Citations
Ubrogepant (MK‐1602) is a novel, oral, calcitonin gene‐related peptide receptor antagonist in clinical development with positive Phase III outcomes for acute treatment of migraine. This paper describes the population exposure‐response (E‐R) modeling and simulations which were used to inform the Phase III dose‐selection rationale, based on approximately 800 participants pooled across two Phase IIb randomized dose‐finding clinical trials. The E‐R model describes the placebo and ubrogepant treatment effects based on migraine pain endpoints (2‐hour pain relief and 2‐hour pain freedom) at various dose levels. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to evaluate various assumptions of placebo response in light of the high placebo response observed in one Phase II trial. A population PK model describing the effect of formulations was included in the E‐R simulation framework to assess potential dose implications of a formulation switch from Phase II to Phase III. Model‐based simulations predict that a dose of 25 mg or higher is likely to achieve significantly better efficacy than placebo with desirable efficacy levels. The understanding of E‐R helped support the dose selection for the Phase III clinical trials.
January 2020
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157 Reads
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140 Citations
Introduction: We evaluated the clinical profile of the orexin receptor antagonist suvorexant for treating insomnia in patients with mild-to-moderate probable Alzheimer's disease (AD) dementia. Methods: Randomized, double-blind, 4-week trial of suvorexant 10 mg (could be increased to 20 mg based on clinical response) or placebo in patients who met clinical diagnostic criteria for both probable AD dementia and insomnia. Sleep was assessed by overnight polysomnography in a sleep laboratory. The primary endpoint was change-from-baseline in polysomnography-derived total sleep time (TST) at week 4. Results: Of 285 participants randomized (suvorexant, N = 142; placebo, N = 143), 277 (97%) completed the trial (suvorexant, N = 136; placebo, N = 141). At week 4, the model-based least squares mean improvement-from-baseline in TST was 73 minutes for suvorexant and 45 minutes for placebo; (difference = 28 minutes [95% confidence interval 11-45], p < 0.01). Somnolence was reported in 4.2% of suvorexant-treated patients and 1.4% of placebo-treated patients. Discussion: Suvorexant improved TST in patients with probable AD dementia and insomnia.
October 2019
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156 Reads
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17 Citations
The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer s Disease
The engineered fusion protein NPT088 targets amyloid in vitro and in animal models of Alzheimer's disease. Previous studies showed that NPT088 treatment reduced β-amyloid plaque and tau aggregate loads in mouse disease models. Here, we present the results from an initial clinical study of NPT088 in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease. Patients were treated with 4 dose levels of NPT088 for 6 months to evaluate its safety and tolerability. Exploratory measurements included measurement of change in β-amyloid plaque and tau burden utilizing Positron Emission Tomography imaging as well as measures of Alzheimer's disease symptoms. At endpoint NPT088 was generally safe and well-tolerated with the most prominent finding being infusion reactions in a minority of patients. No effect of NPT088 on brain plaques, tau aggregates or Alzheimer's disease symptoms was observed.
August 2019
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383 Reads
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67 Citations
Alzheimer's Research & Therapy
Background: Verubecestat, a BACE1 inhibitor that reduces Aβ levels in the cerebrospinal fluid of humans, was not effective in a phase 3 trial (EPOCH) of mild-to-moderate AD and was associated with adverse events. To assist in the development of BACE1 inhibitors, we report detailed safety findings from EPOCH. Methods: EPOCH was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled 78-week trial evaluating verubecestat 12 mg and 40 mg in participants with mild-to-moderate AD diagnosed clinically. The trial was terminated due to futility close to its scheduled completion. Of 1957 participants who were randomized and took treatment, 652 were assigned to verubecestat 12 mg, 652 to verubecestat 40 mg, and 653 to placebo. Adverse events and relevant laboratory, vital sign, and ECG findings were assessed. Results: Verubecestat 12 mg and 40 mg were associated with an increase in the percentage of participants reporting adverse events versus placebo (89 and 92% vs. 82%), although relatively few participants discontinued treatment due to adverse events (8 and 9% vs. 6%). Adverse events that were increased versus placebo included falls and injuries, suicidal ideation, weight loss, sleep disturbance, rash, and hair color change. Most were mild to moderate in severity. Treatment differences in suicidal ideation emerged within the first 3 months but did not appear to increase after 6 months. In contrast, treatment differences in falls and injuries continued to increase over time. Conclusions: Verubecestat was associated with increased risk for several types of adverse events. Falls and injuries were notable for progressive increases over time. While the mechanisms underlying the increased adverse events are unclear, they may be due to BACE inhibition and should be considered in future clinical development programs of BACE1 inhibitors. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01739348 , registered on 29 November 2012.
July 2019
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28 Reads
Citations (75)
... [4] Preladenant (SCH 420814, 2), an A 2A AR antagonist which possesses a PTP scaffold, has reached the phase III clinical trials for the treatment of Parkinson's disease (PD), but failed for lack of efficacy. [5][6][7][8] In order to improve the pharmacokinetic properties of PTPs, a molecular simplification approach was applied on this complex tricyclic scaffold. The pyrazole ring of PTP was eliminated leading to the simplified [1,2,4]triazolo [1,5-c]pyrimidine (TP, 3) scaffold. ...
- Citing Article
April 2014
Neurology
... In two Phase II trials evaluating Preladenant in combination with LD in PD patients for 12 or 36 weeks, a significant OFF time reduction was shown [256,257]. On the contrary, in other Phase III and Phase II trials, Preladenant failed to elicit the same effect probably owing to inappropriate study design and execution [258][259][260]. ...
- Citing Article
April 2014
Neurology
... In contrast, in western countries the trust develops when patients perceive their physician to be sincere, credible, honest, and benevolent 29,30 . The high level of trust can result in a high response rate (placebo response) and vice versa 31 . When trust is high, little response may induce more satisfaction. ...
- Citing Article
April 2014
Neurology
... We wish to state at the outset that our analyses are limited by confounding, which is introduced using a descriptive literature review and analyses, since the selected articles do not contain standard protocols and contain arbitrary retrospective and or descriptive historical heterogeneous measures both in assessment and outcome, including such parameters as exact application of polysomnography and measurements of actigraphy and other measures and variables noted of interest among the studies which vary. 37 Although previous studies have suggested actigraphy as a reliable method to record sleep and circadian rhythm parameters in patients with dementia, 45,46 Svetnik et al. 38 couldn't reproduce the same results of the effects of suvorexant on sleep using actigraphy compared to the use PSG. This might question the reliability and accuracy of using actigraphy to collect data which is more feasible and less costly than PSG. ...
- Citing Article
August 2021
Journal of Sleep Research
... BACE1 plays a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of AD due to the elevated levels and increased activity observed in the brains and bodily fluids of individuals with AD. Extensive cell biology studies have been conducted to deepen the understanding of BACE1 regulation and identify novel therapeutic targets within its pathway [10][11][12][13][14][15] . Therefore, BACE1 is recognized as a pivotal therapeutic target for AD, and selective BACE1 inhibition is critically sought after for drug development. ...
- Citing Article
November 2020
Brain
... In this test, subjects are required to match numbers with corresponding symbols within 90 s. Each correctly matched number earns 1 point (36). This test is a valid and reliable measure for detecting early signs of cognitive decline (37) and predicting cognitive disorders (38). ...
- Citing Article
November 2020
... We assume that synaptic currents in pyramidal cells are the major contributing dipole that generates field potentials [19], because their large number dominates the synaptic currents in other types of cells. Gamma power () is then calculated as the integral of the gamma band (35-65 Hz), while beta-power is calculated as the integral over the spectrum (20)(21)(22)(23)(24)(25)(26)(27)(28)(29)(30)(31)(32)(33)(34)(35). ...
- Citing Article
- Full-text available
September 2017
Neurology
... Additionally, the drugs brexpiprazole and suvorexant are FDA-approved to manage the behavioral and psychological symptoms of AD (FDA-Approved Treatments for Alzheimer's, n.d.; Grossberg et al., 2024;Herring et al., 2020). Brexpiprazole has been approved as the Rexulti™ supplement and has been shown to manage the higher prevalence of agitation in AD patients, which includes restlessness, hostile language, and physical aggression (Commissioner, ...
- Citing Article
- Full-text available
January 2020
... In support of phase III dose selection for ubrogepant, population pharmacokinetic modeling and exposureresponse analyses were performed utilizing data from two phase IIb studies. 22 The phase IIb trials consisted of a parallel dose-finding/efficacy study (N = 834 enrolled) and a smaller pharmacokinetics/efficacy (N = 195 enrolled) study. Ubrogepant doses of 1, 10, 25, 50, and 100 mg were evaluated for a single migraine attack and compared to placebo; additional doses were taken by participants on day 3 and day 4 following the migraine attack (day 1) in the pharmacokinetics study. ...
- Citing Article
- Full-text available
January 2020
... infections [48,49], joint infections [50,51], metabolic syndrome [52]. Although an increasing number of diseases are also being included such as chronic rhinosinusitis and Alzheimer's Disease [53], unfortunately none of the oral diseases is among them. One aspect is that clinical trials of phages inherently face multiple challenges. ...
- Citing Article
October 2019
The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer s Disease