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Annotation


Morgan SL, Baggott JE. Medical foods: products for the management of chronic diseases. Nutr Rev. 2006 Nov;64(11):495-501. PubMed Abstract

Comments on Related News
  Related News: Medical Foods—Fallback Option for Elusive AD Drug Status?

Comment by:  Suzanne Craft, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
Submitted 14 October 2009  |  Permalink Posted 14 October 2009

As noted in this interesting article, I think the approach of supplying alternate forms of bioenergetic substrates to patients with Alzheimer disease is worth further exploration, and future studies must be designed and powered to test a differential APOE response, which we have observed in our own studies of insulin/energy-modulating agents. In the interest of full disclosure, as the article described, I received a small grant from Accera to conduct an acute dosing study of an MCT formulation in 2004; additionally, I also serve as a consultant for Accera, a fact that was not mentioned in the article.

View all comments by Suzanne Craft

  Related News: Medical Foods—Fallback Option for Elusive AD Drug Status?

Comment by:  Steve Orndorff (Disclosure)
Submitted 28 October 2009  |  Permalink Posted 30 October 2009

The premise of this article is the notion that companies are using the medical food route as a “fallback” or backup strategy if their drug compound fails in the clinic. As I will discuss below, this premise is flawed. I wish to point out that this was never the intent for Axona (AC-1202). As I stated in the Tangled Neuron interview, Axona was originally intended to be a surrogate for testing our new therapeutic approach (ketone treatment for neuronal hypometabolism) in AD patients so the company could secure venture funding for its drug development platform. Based on our research, we found evidence that the dietary addition of ketones can delay and reduce the magnitude of cognitive dysfunction in patients with mild to moderate AD and can be an effective part of the dietary management of the disease. As a result, we concluded that the product could be appropriately marketed as a medical food. The company never filed an IND for Axona or intended to develop it as a drug. However, we did perform our clinical studies to pharmaceutical standards with industry and FDA-accepted...  Read more

  Related News: Medical Foods—Fallback Option for Elusive AD Drug Status?

Comment by:  Frederic Calon
Submitted 12 November 2009  |  Permalink Posted 12 November 2009

I think it would have been a major advantage to get Ketasyn/AC1202 FDA-approved as a drug. Ketasyn/AC1202 could have then been used by health professionals and prescribed to the right persons. There is a strong rationale in using medium chain triglycerides (MTCs) as a source of ketone bodies to boost brain metabolism. It is likely that certain specific patients in “energy crisis”, such as very old persons for example, could benefit from MCTs. Unfortunately, the use of Ketasyn/AC1202 as a medical food will dilute its true therapeutic benefit.

In summary, I might be wrong but I think Ketasyn would have had more chance to achieve its full therapeutic potential as a drug than as a medical food.

View all comments by Frederic Calon

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