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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Hock C, Konietzko U, Streffer JR, Tracy J, Signorell A, Müller-Tillmanns B, Lemke U, Henke K, Moritz E, Garcia E, Wollmer MA, Umbricht D, de Quervain DJ, Hofmann M, Maddalena A, Papassotiropoulos A, Nitsch RM. Antibodies against beta-amyloid slow cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease. Neuron. 2003 May 22;38(4):547-54. PubMed Abstract, View on AlzSWAN

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Alzheimer’s Vaccine: In Some Patients, at Least, It Might Just Work

Comment by:  John Hardy, ARF Advisor
Submitted 21 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 21 May 2003

This an extremely interesting preliminary report. The editorial by Winblad and Blum is very careful in conveying both the excitement this data causes, and also the caution that needs to be exercised in its interpretation. Hock and his colleagues are to be congratulated for their astuteness in taking part in the Elan trial, but negotiating themselves some freedom in using their own data from their trial subjects. Let's hope that when Elan releases the data on the whole trial, the overall results confirm these preliminary data. Even if immunization turns out not to be the way forward for safety reasons, such an outcome would imply that other Aβ-reducing strategies have every chance of clinical success.

View all comments by John Hardy

  Primary News: Alzheimer’s Vaccine: In Some Patients, at Least, It Might Just Work

Comment by:  David Holtzman
Submitted 21 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 21 May 2003

It is encouraging that in a subset (n=30) of the more than 300 subjects enrolled in the Elan study who were analyzed, there is preliminary evidence that there may be a positive response. This preliminary analysis suggests that further, more conclusive studies of the immunization approach (active and passive) should continue. Though the analysis argues for more studies, the title and some of the conclusions of this study are not yet justified. As pointed out in the accompanying commentary by Winblad and Blum, the control group, which is really N=6 who received placebo or N=10 total who did not generate "antibodies," is very small. More importantly, not only is the control group small, that group deteriorated at a much faster rate than subjects with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease normally worsen. The amount of MMSE decline in the group treated with immunization is actually what is described in patients with Alzheimer's who are on cholinesterase inhibitors, (which many of these patients were on), namely about one to three points in the first year of follow-up. It would have...  Read more

  Primary News: Alzheimer’s Vaccine: In Some Patients, at Least, It Might Just Work

Comment by:  Vincent Marchesi, ARF Advisor
Submitted 21 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 21 May 2003

Since this is a clinical study involving human subjects, one cannot expect it to be without unavoidable limitations. The numbers of patients are small, the follow-up is of relatively short duration, and these are both problems, as Winblad and Blum point out. The mental state of AD patients can fluctuate widely, so I think more specific functional tests will have to be done to strengthen the case for a positive effect.

Let's assume that some of the patients show improvement and this is correlated with antibody levels. Can we rule out some nonspecific immunological reactions that cause improvement independent of the ability of the antibodies to bind to Aβ? If these were experimental animals, one would be able to test the effects of immunizing with different forms of synthetic peptides. This is clearly not possible with human subjects. I am also concerned about the different results that are reported for the ELISA tests and the authors' tissue amyloid plaque assay. It is possible that they are looking at different conformational epitopes, as the authors suggest, but one should...  Read more


  Primary News: Alzheimer’s Vaccine: In Some Patients, at Least, It Might Just Work

Comment by:  Dave Morgan (Disclosure)
Submitted 21 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 21 May 2003

This paper continues the rollercoaster of emotion regarding the use of amyloid vaccines to treat Alzheimer's disease. The identification that Aβ vaccination could dramatically reduce amyloid deposition in the PDAPP mouse (Schenk et al., 1999), followed by demonstration that the vaccine also protected mice from learning and memory deficits (Janus et al., 2000; Morgan et al., 2000), led to early trials of the vaccine in humans. Although Phase I trials found no adverse consequences, six percent of the Phase II trial patients developed aseptic meningoencephalitis (Schenk, 2002), which in some cases was severe (Nicoll et al., 2003). This led to premature termination of the trial, with cessation of any further inoculations with the Aβ peptide. Thus,...  Read more

  Primary News: Alzheimer’s Vaccine: In Some Patients, at Least, It Might Just Work

Comment by:  Claudio Soto (Disclosure)
Submitted 22 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 22 May 2003

During the last 10 years, much evidence has been reported in support of the amyloid hypothesis for the progression of AD. However, the key finding of whether inhibitors of Aβ amyloidogenesis would lead to a cognitive improvement was missing. In this very interesting article, Hock et al. report for the first time preliminary results indicating that this may be the case. In addition to the practical implications for treatment, in my opinion the great importance of this study, as well as the previous publication by Nicoll et al., is that it provides crucial data to understand the molecular mechanism of AD pathogenesis in humans. It should also boost the race to develop safer immunization strategies and other anti-Aβ production, misfolding, and aggregation approaches for AD treatment. I concur with Winblad and Blum's caution on the interpretation of results with very small number of patients, but Hock, Nitsch, and colleagues should be congratulated for making these results public and imitated by the rest of the centers...  Read more

  Primary News: Alzheimer’s Vaccine: In Some Patients, at Least, It Might Just Work

Comment by:  Karen Hsiao Ashe
Submitted 23 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 23 May 2003

This paper shows that immunization with Aβ may slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease, but does not restore cognitive function. These results contrast with studies of immunoneutralization of Aβ in AβPP-transgenic mice, which demonstrate reversal of memory loss and restoration of cognitive function (Kotilinek et al., 2002; Dodart et al., 2002). The most likely explanation for this discrepancy is that important differences in pathology exist between AβPP-transgenic mice and Alzheimer’s disease.

During the first year following the appearance of memory deficits in Tg(APPNL)2576 mice, neurons and synapses are largely intact (Irizarry et al., 1997). During the second year, postsynaptic markers decline, while presynaptic markers and neurons remain unchanged (G. Cole and B. Hyman, personal communication). We have proposed that soluble Aβ assemblies impair memory in...  Read more


  Primary News: Alzheimer’s Vaccine: In Some Patients, at Least, It Might Just Work

Comment by:  Beka Solomon
Submitted 27 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 27 May 2003

One of the critical questions in β-amyloid immunotherapy is whether depletion of the amyloid plaques is accompanied by improvement in behavioral/neurophysiological impairments and in a reduction in the nerve cell death of Alzheimer’s disease. In other words, does immunization with Aβ simply clear a neuropathological byproduct, or can it cure the disease? Anti-β-amyloid immunization of the AD mouse model showed remarkable efficacy in reducing amyloid and restoring cognitive function. The present data is the first attempt to compare cognitive test results in human AD patients—a small number so far—before and one year after vaccination. Indeed, patients with serum antibodies against β-amyloid plaques showed diminished cognitive decline and slowed disease progression, and the "dose-response" relationship between antibody levels and clinical effects constitutes evidence that amyloid proteins are indeed a primary cause of Alzheimer’s symptoms. The treated patients, suffering mild or moderate dementia, received only two injections and throughout the year were dosed with...  Read more

  Comment by:  Bart De Strooper, ARF Advisor
Submitted 28 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 28 May 2003

These are really exciting results, and we are likely looking at a historical crucial manuscript providing the proof-of-principle that a cure for AD is possible, and definitively establishing the amyloid hypothesis for AD.

View all comments by Bart De Strooper

  Comment by:  Alexei R. Koudinov
Submitted 28 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 30 May 2003
  I recommend this paper


HASTA LA VISTA, AMYLOID CASCADE HYPOTHESIS, OR WILL ACADEMIC DISHONESTY YIELD ALZHEIMER'S CURE?

Please see my letter to Neuron editor regarding the article by Hock et al.
Science SAGE KE (26 May 2003) [ Full Text ] [ No-registration access link ] .


View all comments by Alexei R. Koudinov


  Comment by:  Chris Masterjohn
Submitted 3 August 2005  |  Permalink Posted 4 August 2005

This paper was interesting, but I find several problems with it.

First, there was no control group that was not immunized, and the rate of increase in antibody levels was not studied in the patients prior to baseline. Thus, since some patients had endogenous antibodies to β amyloid, there was no evidence that the immunizations actually caused the increase in antibodies.

Since a large portion of the patients did not generate a significant increase in antibody levels, and these patients did worse than the literature average on some cognitive tests, this calls into question several things:

1) Perhaps the immunization is doing harm in some and is benefiting others,

or, what I consider more likely:

2) The level of antibody increase may simply be gauging the health of the immune system, and thereby gauging general health. Those who have the lowest response, then, have worse-than-average general health and thus would suffer a worse-than-average cognitive decline.

A control of non-immunized subjects is absolutely necessary to judge how the immunization...  Read more

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Patients were randomized in a double-blind study design: 24 patients received an active vaccine consisting of preaggregated synthetic Aβ42 along with QS-21 adjuvant, and 6 patients received placebo. Both active vaccine and placebo were given as a prime intramuscular injection, followed 1 month later by a boost intramuscular injection.

CSF and plasma Aβ42 were measured by the INNOTEST β-Amyloid1-42 ELISA according to the manufacturer's protocol (Innogenetics, Belgium).

Twenty of thirty patients in this study generated antibodies that specifically recognized β-amyloid plaques on brain tissue sections obtained from transgenic mice expressing in brains both human APP with the Swedish mutation and human presenilin 1 (PS1) with the M146L mutation (APPSwxPS1M146L)(Thanks to Drs. Karen Duff and Karen Hsiao-Ashe for transgenic mouse lines).

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