Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Background
Tau pathology correlates with and predicts clinical decline in Alzheimer's disease. Approved tau-targeted therapies are not available.Methods
ADAMANT, a 24-month randomised, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, double-blinded, multicenter, Phase 2 clinical trial (EudraCT2015-000630-30, NCT02579252) enrolled 196 participants with Alzheimer's disease; 119 are included in this post-hoc subgroup analysis. AADvac1, active immunotherapy against pathological tau protein. A machine learning model predicted likely Amyloid+Tau+ participants from baseline MRI.Statistical methods
MMRM for change from baseline in cognition, function, and neurodegeneration; linear regression for associations between antibody response and endpoints.Results
The prediction model achieved PPV of 97.7% for amyloid, 96.2% for tau. 119 participants in the full analysis set (70 treatment and 49 placebo) were classified as A+T+. A trend for CDR-SB 104-week change (estimated marginal means [emm] = -0.99 points, 95% CI [-2.13, 0.13], p = 0.0825]) and ADCS-MCI-ADL (emm = 3.82 points, CI [-0.29, 7.92], p = 0.0679) in favour of the treatment group was seen. Reduction was seen in plasma NF-L (emm = -0.15 log pg/mL, CI [-0.27, -0.03], p = 0.0139). Higher antibody response to AADvac1 was related to slowing of decline on CDR-SB (rho = -0.10, CI [-0.21, 0.01], p = 0.0376) and ADL (rho = 0.15, CI [0.03, 0.27], p = 0.0201), and related to slower brain atrophy (rho = 0.18-0.35, p < 0.05 for temporal volume, whole cortex, and right and left hippocampus).Conclusions
In the subgroup of ML imputed or CSF identified A+T+, AADvac1 slowed AD-related decline in an antibody-dependent manner. Larger anti-tau trials are warranted.Funding
AXON Neuroscience SE.
SUBMITTER: Cullen NC
PROVIDER: S-EPMC10733085 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Jan
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Cullen Nicholas C NC Novak Petr P Tosun Duygu D Kovacech Branislav B Hanes Jozef J Kontsekova Eva E Fresser Michal M Ropele Stefan S Feldman Howard H HH Schmidt Reinhold R Winblad Bengt B Zilka Norbert N
EBioMedicine 20231214
<h4>Background</h4>Tau pathology correlates with and predicts clinical decline in Alzheimer's disease. Approved tau-targeted therapies are not available.<h4>Methods</h4>ADAMANT, a 24-month randomised, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, double-blinded, multicenter, Phase 2 clinical trial (EudraCT2015-000630-30, NCT02579252) enrolled 196 participants with Alzheimer's disease; 119 are included in this post-hoc subgroup analysis. AADvac1, active immunotherapy against pathological tau protein. A mac ...[more]