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  1. #1
    DF Admin 4me2's Avatar
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    Attention Jab to reverse Alzheimer's:

    Jab to reverse Alzheimer's: Breakthrough vaccine could be available within two years






    Breakthrough: An Alzheimer's vaccine may be available in two years. (Posed by models)





    A revolutionary jab that could stop the onslaught of Alzheimer’s disease may be available within two years.
    The vaccine has been proved to halt and even reverse the damage caused to the brain by the mind-robbing condition.
    Although it would not be a cure, it is regarded as one of the biggest potential breakthroughs in years in the search for Alzheimer’s treatments.
    It is one of only two vaccines for the condition to have reached the final stages of testing, known as phase three.

    This means it has passed initial safety hurdles and been shown to be effective.
    It is now in the final stages of clinical trials and is being tested on more than 10,000 patients around the world, including hundreds in the UK.
    Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia affect more than 800,000 Britons, and the number is expected to double in a generation as the population ages.
    Existing drugs can delay the progress of Alzheimer’s, but their failure to tackle the underlying cause in the brain means that their effect quickly wears off and the disease soon takes its devastating course.
    In contrast, the bapineuzumab jab prevents or even reverses the build-up of amyloid, the toxic protein that clogs the brain in Alzheimer’s, destroying vital connections between cells. It is hoped this will dramatically slow the progress of the disease.
    In one early test, it cut the number of amyloid plaques by a quarter.
    The development of tests which can detect Alzheimer’s in its earliest stages would allow the jab to be given at the first possible opportunity.
    This would enable it to save thousands from the most devastating effects of the incurable disease, which leaves sufferers unable to walk, talk and even swallow, making them totally dependent on others.
    Although vaccines are traditionally thought of as preventing disease, bapineuzumab is designed as a treatment.
    Dr David Wilkinson, from Southampton University’s Memory Assessment and Research Centre, was involved in some of the earliest research into Alzheimer’s vaccines in the 1990s.
    He said: ‘Hopefully the vaccine will make a big difference to Alzheimer’s treatment. If we can give it early – before major brain impairment is seen – it may have an important part to play.
    ‘If it can clear amyloid plaques from the brain and we can give it very early in the disease process, it may prevent some of the damage.’
    A treatment capable of dramatically slowing the condition’s progress could also have huge financial benefits, with experts estimating that half of the £17billion spent on Alzheimer’s in Britain each year could be saved if patients developed the disease five years later than they do now.
    The three drug firms behind the vaccine, Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson and Elan Corporation, are expected to seek marketing approval when testing is completed towards the end of next year.
    The cost of the vaccine is likely to be decided only if drug licensing authorities in the UK and Europe give it the go-ahead, possibly within the next two to three years.
    It is likely that the treatment for each patient will cost several thousand pounds per year, with patients being given regular injections every few months for the rest of their lives.
    Experts stress that there is no guarantee the vaccine will work for everybody.
    Dr Wilkinson’s own research shows that getting rid of the amyloid plaques does not always prevent the disease.
    And tests show that the jab has little effect on patients carrying a gene that raises the odds of the disease.
    Dr Simon Ridley, head of research at Alzheimer’s Research UK, said the vaccine could be a significant breakthrough if further trials show it not only clears brain deposits but also prevents dementia.
    ‘It’s too early to tell whether bapineuzumab could benefit people until the results of this trial are known,’ he said.
    ‘But any new drug that tackles the disease itself has got to be better than what we have at the moment.
    ‘Existing drugs don’t touch the disease process. They help with the symptoms but not the underlying loss of brain cells.
    ‘We desperately need to see more treatments being tested if we are to have the best chance of tackling the condition.
    Dr Ridley added: ‘This means it’s vital that we invest in more research.’
    He said trials had highlighted side-effects in some patients given high doses of the vaccine.
    Some developed a condition called vasogenic cerebral oedema, a form of swelling in the brain.
    Professor Clive Ballard, director of research at the Alzheimer’s Society, said: ‘Finding the right vaccine would be a life-changing matter for people living with Alzheimer’s.
    ‘However, this is early days and a substantial amount of research is needed.
    ‘Dementia research is desperately underfunded and to make the breakthroughs we need, we must invest now.’
    The jab is one of several that are under development that could provide a potential bonanza for drug companies around the world.


    VACCINE TARGETS TOXIN IN THE BRAIN

    The jab targets amyloid, the toxic protein that clogs the brain in Alzheimer’s patients. As the clumps of amyloid get bigger, they stop the brain cells from ‘talking’ to each other, disrupting memory, mood and behaviour.
    The vaccine contains an antibody that zeroes in on amyloid and tries to flush it out of the body. It is hoped this will dramatically slow the progress of the disease.

    Because the vaccine contains the antibody, rather than prompting the immune system to make its own supply, patients would need injections every few months.
    However, some experts are unconvinced that amyloid is the key villain in Alzheimer’s, and early tests show that the jab will not help everyone.


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  2. #2
    DF Super Moderator {{909}}'s Avatar
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    Default Re: Jab to reverse Alzheimer's:

    Altzheimers scares me shitless, hopefully something comes of this.

  3. #3
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    Default Re: Jab to reverse Alzheimer's:

    Let's not forget Parkinsons and other mental illnesses either.

  4. #4
    DF VIP Member Zippeyrude's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jab to reverse Alzheimer's:

    every time there is medical or scientific progress towards cures / vaccines of illnesses i feel only respect for those that are instrumental in these projects.

    if only the west could stop fucking around bombing people and funnel the money into research to cure and not harm humans this would be a better world.

  5. #5
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    Default Re: Jab to reverse Alzheimer's:

    Alzheimer's disease drug shelved after trial failure

    Two US drug firms say they will stop development of an Alzheimer's drug because it failed in two late-stage clinical trials.


    Bapineuzumab, made by Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson, was designed to halt build-up of plaque in the brain.


    But it failed to improve cognitive or functional performance compared with a placebo in certain patients.


    Alzheimer's is the most common form of dementia, as well as the sixth leading cause of death in the United States.
    An estimated 36 million people worldwide are believed to have dementia, including Alzheimer's.


    Late stage trials

    Both firms announced on 23 July that the first clinical trial of the intravenous (IV) version of bapineuzumab had failed.


    In that study, patients with a gene that is associated with a greater risk of Alzheimer's were tested.


    But results with the group were largely the same as with those who did not have the gene, who were tested in the second study.


    The second trial's end means that additional studies on the IV version will not take place; however, Johnson and Johnson said a study of subcutaneous use would continue.
    Some had predicted that the IV studies of bapineuzumab would fail because they were treating those whose brains were already damaged.


    "One of the strong thoughts in the field is that you really have to treat people before they become demented," William Thies, chief scientific officer of the Alzheimer's Association told Reuters, adding that the announcement did not prevent the drug from being tested as a preventative.


    And Mr Thies said that despite the trial's failure, data from the experiment could still be useful.


    "These studies are terribly important for us to learn about Alzheimer's disease, and that part of the process is just starting as the data continues to be crunched in a variety of ways."


    Johnson and Johnson had agreed in 2009 to invest up to $1.5bn (£961m) in bapineuzumab.


    In a statement, Steven Romano, head of Pfizer's Medicines Development Group said they were "obviously very disappointed" with the trial's outcome.


    "We are also saddened by the lost opportunity to provide a meaningful advance for patients afflicted with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's disease and their caregivers," he said.
    A similar drug being developed by Eli Lilly, solanezumab, is also considered a long-shot to succeed, but results of the trials will not be available until later this year.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-19159167

  6. #6
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    Default Re: Jab to reverse Alzheimer's:

    Great News. I lost my mum to this

  7. #7
    DF VIP Member crazyal's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jab to reverse Alzheimer's:

    Quote Originally Posted by Mickey View Post
    Great News. I lost my mum to this
    Not great news Mickey - the post just before yours mentioned that the trial has been shelved
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  8. #8
    DF VIP Member super mike's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jab to reverse Alzheimer's:

    Even a failed trial still provides masses of incredibly useful research though. The silver lining is there, although a mere glimmer it's there all the same.

  9. #9
    DF VIP Member crazyadi's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jab to reverse Alzheimer's:

    i was never quiet sure how this would be a successful trial as even if the amyloid responsible for the effects of alzheimers could be stopped it couldnt possibly repair the damage already done.

    there is a new trial taking place (phase II) though, which looks far far more promising as a prophylactic treatment.

    http://www.alzheimersresearchuk.org/...esour-comment/

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