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Roche to discontinue phase III study of gantenerumab in prodromal Alzheimer’s disease

BaselMonday, December 22, 2014, 10:00 Hrs  [IST]

Roche announced the decision to discontinue SCarlet RoAD (WN25203), a phase III study of investigational anti-amyloid medicine gantenerumab in prodromal (pre-dementia) Alzheimer’s disease, based on results of a pre-planned futility analysis and recommendation by the independent Data Monitoring Committee. No new safety signals for gantenerumab were observed in this analysis and the overall safety profile was similar to that seen in the phase I trial (NN19866).

Data from the SCarlet RoAD study will be shared with the medical community after full review and analysis. Findings from the trial will inform future research programmes, approaches and clinical trial design.

“We are disappointed with these study results because people with early stage Alzheimer's need new medicines that delay disease progression,” said Sandra Horning, MD, chief medical officer and Head of Global Product Development at Roche. “This is the first phase III trial to evaluate a potential disease-modifying medicine in this early prodromal stage of Alzheimer’s disease. We remain committed to investigating new medicines for this devastating illness.”

Alzheimer’s disease is a major focus of Roche neuroscience research and development.  The company has a broad research programme that focuses on several pathways believed to play important roles in Alzheimer’s disease.  Its researchers are developing and investigating medicines designed to target these pathways in multiple ways and across different stages of the disease. Gantenerumab continues to be evaluated in the phase III Marguerite RoAD study (WN28745) in a later stage of Alzheimer’s disease (mild dementia due to Alzheimer’s). In addition, Roche has two investigational medicines for the disease in phase II development (crenezumab, an anti-amyloid antibody, and RG1577, a monoamine oxidase-B inhibitor).

Alzheimer’s disease is a progressive, fatal disease of the brain that gradually destroys memory and thinking skills and impairs basic daily functions such as the ability to manage one’s own activities. Biological changes are believed to start many years before clinical symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease become evident. In the early stages (prodromal), people may have difficulty remembering things, but there are no signs of dementia. However, in the later stage of the disease people are often unable to communicate and increasingly become reliant on others for even simple day-to-day tasks. For people 65 and older, the disease typically progresses for four to eight years after diagnosis and eventually leads to death.i Dementia affects 44 million people worldwide with 7.7 million new cases each year, of which Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form.ii There is no cure for Alzheimer’s disease. Current treatments focus on alleviating symptoms and are unable to stop Alzheimer’s from progressing because they do not affect the disease’s underlying cause.iii

Gantenerumab (RG1450) is an investigational, fully human, monoclonal antibody designed to decrease levels of beta amyloid, a protein that accumulates in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s disease and is hypothesised to play a central role in disease development and progression.

 
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