Key Study Retracted – Amyloid Causation of Alzheimer’s Disease in Doubt
Ever since Alois Alzheimer dissected his patient’s brain in at the turn of the 20th century the assumed primary mechanism underlying Alzheimer’s disease (AD) was the proliferation of amyloid protein in the brain with associated destruction of neural tissue and pathways. That focus on amyloid led to the development and recent approval of drugs that act to reduce the amyloid burden in the brain.
However, like every other AD treatment adopted since the turn of this century, those recently developed “breakthrough” anti-amyloid drugs fall short of the goal of an “effective disease-modifying treatment.” Like the medications in use for decades, they also only inhibit AD progression by modestly slowing cognitive decline and “turning back the clock of memory loss” for around six months. “Indeed, in the best-case scenario, lowering cerebral Aβ (Beta-amyloid) levels has resulted in some delay of the cognitive decline but it has not arrested the progression to dementia, thus demonstrating an efficacy similar to that of existing therapies (e.g., cholinesterase inhibitors).”1
The unavoidable conclusion has been that amyloid is not the whole story, and removing it is not a cure. For example, with lequembi, one of the two available anti-amyloid drugs, patients still got worse even when amyloid levels declined or disappeared. Further undermining a singular role for amyloid is the unprecedented retraction in June 2024 of the “landmark” 2006 study naming the specific amyloid protein causing Alzheimer’s disease. That study spawned the dominant hypothesis that “amyloid drives Alzheimer’s” and defined the target for investigation and investment in subsequent anti-amyloid Alzheimer’s therapies. However, key images in that paper were identified as “doctored” by a 2022 investigation, calling into question the foundation underlying the thousands of subsequent papers that had cited (i.e., relied upon) that one. According to some sources, this is the “most cited paper ever retracted.”
The “amyloid cascade” is a widely accepted hypothesis that the neurodegeneration and resultant dementia of AD result from the formation and accumulation of toxic beta-amyloid proteins in our brains. The repudiation by its authors of an article that has provided longstanding support for this theory is surely causing researchers, funders and clinicians to reconsider the amyloid’s role. Increasing interest and resources are turning towards the treatment of Professor Alzheimer’s patient’s second finding, those unusual tangles of tau proteins in the cerebral cortex.
References:
1Ricciarelli R, Fedele E. The Amyloid Cascade Hypothesis in Alzheimer’s Disease: It’s Time to Change Our Mind. Curr Neuropharmacol. 2017;15(6):926-935.
Arnold, SE, Wolk, DA. Anti-Amyloid Therapies: Progress and Promise. Penn Memory Center 2/7/24 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sz-ufCEacBc
Budson A, Solomon P. Memory Loss, Alzheimer’s Disease and Dementia. 3. ed. Elsevier, Inc; 2022
Congdon, E. E., & Sigurdsson, E. M. (2022). Tau-targeting therapies for Alzheimer disease. Nature Reviews Neurology, 18(7), 399-415.
Doggrell SA. Still grasping at straws: donanemab in Alzheimer’s disease. Expert Opin Investig Drugs. Aug 2021;30(8):797-801. doi:10.1080/13543784.2021.19480 10.
Lesné S, Koh MT, Kotilinek L, Kayed R, Glabe CG, Yang A, Gallagher M, Ashe KH. A specific amyloid-beta protein assembly in the brain impairs memory. Nature. 2006 Mar 16;440(7082):352-7. Retraction in: Nature. 2024 Jul;631(8019):240.
Pillar, C. Authors move to retract discredited Alzheimer’s study.
Scott, D. Do we have Alzheimer’s disease all wrong? Vox.com Jun 17, 2024
https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/355108/alzheimers-disease-drug-approval-research-retraction
Originally Published on https://agingoralzheimers.com/
Kenneth Frumkin, PhD, MD, FACEP studied physiological psychology (the interaction of the body’s basic biologic mechanisms with behavior) in college and graduate school. He earned his Masters and Ph.D. degrees from McGill University for his work on the relative contributions of nature and nurture to the ingrained survival mechanism of poison-avoidance in rats. After two years of research at the U.S. Army’s Biomedical Laboratories, Ken went on to medical school and a residency in emergency medicine. His 36-year medical career was split between community hospital emergency departments and teaching, research, and practice in military academic medical centers.
Board-certified in his specialty, Dr. Frumkin is the author of over three dozen peer-reviewed publications and textbook chapters in psychology and medicine. His article “How to Survive the Emergency Room” published in the AARP Bulletin, was a 2022 National Mature Media Merit Award winner. A complete list of publications and complete resume are at www.linkedin.com/in/KennethFrumkinPhDMD . A Fellow and Life Member of the American College of Emergency Physicians and their Geriatric Emergency Medicine Section, Dr. Frumkin is also an Emeritus member of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine and their Academy of Geriatric Emergency Medicine. Having retired as a civilian employee of the Department of the Navy in 2017, Dr. Frumkin is currently a volunteer member of the academic faculty at the Emergency Medicine Residency, Naval Medical Center, Portsmouth, Virginia.
Dr. Frumkin writes from the perspective of a practiced author and researcher and, most importantly, as a fellow boomer with “skin in the game.” He, too, is seeking the answers to nearly every older-person’s questions about their fluctuating memories and the possibility of progressive cognitive decline. His book "Aging or Alzheimer’s? A Doctor’s Personal Guide to Memory Loss, Cognitive Decline, and Dementia" comes out November 5, 2024. (AgingOrAlzheimers.com)