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That is definitely interesting but suggests that a high sugar/starch diet would have protective and beneficial results in MCI/AD patients. The research doesnt support this. Indeed a ketogenic diet is more helpfull. However if a defect in the insulin receptors exists locally in the brain It makes sense that increasing local brain concentrations of insulin might be helpful. This would not be difficult to investigate. I will consider it. Appreciate your time and effort in keeping us up to speed on the research.
LW, I`n not sure I follow your reasoning here. If there exists a defect in the insulin receptors locally in the brain which is responsible for chronic undrernourishment of hippocampal and/or cortical neurons with resultsant STM impairment AND if "intranasal administration of insulin provides rapid delivery of insulin to the central nervous system via bulk flow along olfactory and trigeminal perivascular channels, and slower delivery via olfactory bulb axonal transport, without adversely affecting blood insulin or glucose levels" one might expect rapid and dramatic improvment of Sx without effecting systemic glucose and insulin. No?
Correct, but its that line of reasoning that can lead many to believe a higher overall insulin level (brain and body) is a good thing when it isnt.
Jesus Christ! $230 per dose. This bears looking into.![]()
Alzheimer's Families Clamor for Drug
Alzheimer's Families Clamor for Drug - WSJ.com
FEBRUARY 11, 2012
By SHIRLEY S. WANG
In the wake of research suggesting a skin-cancer drug may have benefits in treating Alzheimer's disease, physicians and advocacy groups are getting a flurry of calls from patients seeking to use the drug off-label.
The clamor underscores how urgently patients want solutions to the rising tide of Alzheimer's. But experts caution that more research is needed to determine whether the drug, bexarotene, is effective in humans at all, not to mention what the dosage should be.
The study, published Thursday in the journal Science, was conducted in mice, and the road to an effective Alzheimer's treatment is littered with failures that looked promising early on in animals.
"The Alzheimer's community is very desperate for anything that shows any sign of hope or promise," said Eric Hall, chief executive of the Alzheimer's Foundation of America, a New York-based advocacy organization that started to field calls from consumers as soon as the paper was published.
While Mr. Hall said he was "cautiously optimistic" about the drug, which appears to clear a sticky substance called amyloid from the brains of Alzheimer's mice, "I don't think people should be taking this in their own hands or running to it," he said.
Sam Gandy, a neurology professor at Mount Sinai School of Medicine and associate director of its Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, said he wasn't surprised to get inquiries from patients about bexarotene, as they also often ask for off-label use of another treatment on the market, intravenous immunoglobulin, which costs about $50,000 a year and is given in time-consuming infusions.
"To patients and families who are this motivated, the idea of an off-label pill is not a major leap," he said. The cost would be $1,200 or more a month and unlikely to be covered by insurance, Dr. Gandy said.
Bexarotene, marketed by Japan-basedEisai Co. as Targretin, is approved for use in a particular form of skin cancer. Once a drug is on the market, physicians are free to prescribe it for other conditions, though drug companies can't promote such off-label uses.
An Eisai spokeswoman said Friday: "It is our policy to not comment on off-label uses of our products. Physicians are able to prescribe products as they see medically necessary." The company also said it had nothing to do with the Science study or its funding.
Targretin is generally used at the highest tolerated dose in cancer patients, according to Keith Flaherty, a skin-cancer specialist at Harvard Medical School. The dosage that might be needed to treat Alzheimer's is unclear but is likely far lower, he said.
The main side effects of the drug generally aren't severe—primarily fatigue, rash and high cholesterol and triglycerides—but the cumulative effects of chronic use in Alzheimer's patients are unknown, said Dr. Flaherty.
Reisa Sperling, director of the Center for Alzheimer Research and Treatment at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, said she wouldn't prescribe the drug right now.
"I feel strongly that it's not safe or advisable for people to take this off-label until we get those critical pieces of information," said Dr. Sperling.
Some patients aren't deterred. Mandy Vear, who lives in Rossendale in the U.K., said that her father's mind has deteriorated to the point where he will get very agitated at times, though he used to be a very placid man. When her sister gave him some bad news a few weeks ago, he physically attacked the sister and was taken away by the police.
Ms. Vear wants to try her father on bexarotene, though she does have concerns about possible side effects. She plans to ask the memory clinic where her father gets treatment to write him a prescription.
"I suppose that's the risk you're willing to take," Ms. Vear said.
Randi Stummer, who lives in Columbus, Ohio, isn't ready to ask a doctor to put her 72-year-old mother on the medicine, but she is worried enough about her mother's memory issues that she wants to find out more about bexarotene and would be willing to consider putting her in a clinical trial.
"We're open to anything," she said.
Gary Landreth, one of the authors of Thursday's Science paper and a professor of neurosciences at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, said he expected to begin a safety study in 12 healthy patients next month, but there weren't any current plans for a larger clinical trial. He said he has received a "massive response" from patients or families but that caution is needed because the work is so preliminary.
Drug makers might be deterred from making the heavy investment in researching an Alzheimer's use for bexarotene. Patents on bexarotene will start to expire this year, and once a generic is available, doctors could prescribe that less-expensive version off-label, undercutting the commercial prospects.
But some drug makers said that Thursday's paper increased their interest in studying similar compounds. "I think it's worth taking a closer look at this," said Michael Ehlers, chief scientific officer for neuroscience at Pfizer Inc.
FDA-approved drug rapidly clears amyloid from the brain, reverses Alzheimer's symptoms in mice
FDA-approved drug rapidly clears amyloid from the brain, reverses Alzheimer's symptoms in mice
Cramer PE, Cirrito JR, Wesson DW, et al. ApoE-Directed Therapeutics Rapidly Clear Beta-Amyloid and Reverse Deficits in AD Mouse Models. Science. ApoE-Directed Therapeutics Rapidly Clear ?-Amyloid and Reverse Deficits in AD Mouse Models
Alzheimer's disease is associated with impaired clearance of ?-amyloid from the brain, a process normally facilitated by apolipoprotein E (ApoE). ApoE expression is transcriptionally induced through the action of the nuclear receptors peroxisome proliferator activated receptor (PPAR?) and liver X receptors (LXR) in coordination with retinoid X receptors (RXR). Oral administration of the RXR agonist, bexarotene, to a murine model of Alzheimer's disease resulted in enhanced clearance of soluble A? within hours in an apoE-dependent manner. A? plaque area was reduced >50% within just 72 hours. Furthermore, bexarotene stimulated the rapid reversal of cognitive, social, and olfactory deficits and improved neural circuit function. Thus, RXR activation stimulates physiological A? clearance mechanisms, resulting in the very rapid reversal of a broad range of A?-induced deficits.
