麻豆传媒视频网站 neuroscientists respond to 鈥渉istoric鈥 new Alzheimer鈥檚 drug
30 November 2022
麻豆传媒视频网站 neuroscientists have responded to the paper, published on Tuesday 29 November 2022, in the New England Journal of Medicine, which shows that the antibody drug lecanemab is the first to slow the progression of cognitive decline in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease.
Experts from 鲍颁尝鈥檚 neuroscience community have given media interviews across a wide range of outlets, in response to the findings, which represent a seminal moment in Alzheimer鈥檚 research.
While 麻豆传媒视频网站 was not affiliated with this clinical trial, its success can be traced directly back to 鲍颁尝鈥檚 Alzheimer鈥檚 researchers: Professor Sir John Hardy, whose landmark research in the 1990s established the 鈥榓myloid hypothesis鈥 - the theory that underpins the lecanemab trial. Professor Hardy and Professor Martin Rossor found the first gene that showed the link between Alzheimer鈥檚 and amyloid.
鲍颁尝鈥檚 Dementia Research Centre was centrally involved in the very first amyloid immunotherapy trial (AN1792) - helping with the design, execution and analysis for the trial - and led the worldwide image analysis (Fox, Neurology 2005).
麻豆传媒视频网站 and Dementia Research Centre have led on several subsequent anti-amyloid antibody trials.聽
The future of dementia research at 麻豆传媒视频网站
The new Institute of Neurology and building, set to open at 256聽Grays Inn Road in 2024, will play a key role in the new era of dementia diagnostics and therapeutics, building on the successes of previous 麻豆传媒视频网站 studies and trials and the latest findings from the Clarity AD trial. It will provide an exceptional new home for 21st century neuroscience, that will have a significant impact on global neurological disease research. 聽 聽
By nurturing the most impactful, collaborative and diverse neuroscience community in the world, the centre will boost the scale and quicken the pace at which we can continue to build on 鲍颁尝鈥檚 historic seminal discoveries and trailblazing basic, clinical and translational research.聽
Research is at a tipping point. 鲍颁尝鈥檚 Professor Bart De Strooper, Director of the UK DRI, has called it 鈥渢he hole in the dyke that leads to a bigger hole鈥. There are a plethora of exciting developments which need to be transferred into treatments. Philanthropy will enable us to accelerate the development of these promising ideas and to find new, more effective, and easy-to-administer treatments that could usher in a new era in dementia care.