2nd clinical trials for promising Alzheimer's drug to take place at U of Sask. - Action News
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Saskatchewan

2nd clinical trials for promising Alzheimer's drug to take place at U of Sask.

During the first phase of clinical trials, 82 per cent of patients stabilized their cognitive functions within the first year of taking the drug while 54 per cent increased their cognitive functions.

Early study found NeuroEPO can significantly slow the progression of the disease and reverse cognitive decline

Man standing in front of scientific equipment in a lab
University of Saskatchewan college of medicine professor Dr. Ron Geyer is helping lead the clinical trials and the research behind NeuroEPO. (Submitted by the University of Saskatchewan)

University of Saskatchewan researchers are helping develop anovel Alzheimer's disease therapythat has been shown in early trials to significantly slow the progression of the fatal cognitive disease.

The team isnow preparing to apply for a second phase of clinical trials to advance the development ofNeuroEPOa drug that is a recombinant form of the naturally produced erythropoietin protein that prevents neuron cell death, and promotes the growth and communication of neurons in the brain.

If approved by Health Canada,clinical trials would take place at the University of Saskatchewan.

"[It's exciting] to be involved with bringing forward a clinical trial where we can offer this therapeutic [drug] early to the people of Saskatchewan," Dr. RonGeyer,one of the University of Saskatchewan college of medicine professors leading the project, said.

LISTEN|U of S to host clinical trial for new Alzheimer's treatment:

The first phase of clinical trials showed promising results for people with early on-set Alzheimer's disease.

Geyersaid 82 per cent of patients stabilized their cognitive functions within the first year of taking the drug, while 54 per cent increased their cognitive functions.

"This is one of the most exciting studies that I've been involved, with because of the efficacy and [because] there is no cure for Alzheimer's," Geyer said on CBC Radio's Afternoon Edition. "Everything out there today is just suppressing the symptoms."

Geyerhopes the second phasecan start in the spring or early summer.

There are about 20,000 people in Saskatchewan currently living with dementia about 65 per cent of them have Alzheimer's disease.

The clinical trials aimto include100 Alzheimer's patients from Saskatoon City Hospital's geriatric evaluation and management program and the University of Saskatchewan's rural and remote memory clinic.

'It provides hope':Alzheimer Society of Sask. CEO

The AlzheimerSociety of Saskatchewan will help recruit patients for the clinical trials.

Joanne Bracken, the organization's CEO, said there will be strong interest.

"There hasn't been a new drug on the market for over 16 years," Bracken says.

"When people who are affected by dementia start to hear that there are possibilities that there could be a treatment for them and something that would actually change the trajectory of disease, that inspires them.

"It provides hope."

Woman standing in front of  poster
Joanne Bracken is the Alzheimer Society of Saskatchewan's CEO. (Submitted by the Alzheimer's Society of Saskatchewan)

Bracken said many Alzheimer'spatients want to participate in research so future generations don't have to go through the same suffering they have.

"They don't want their children to get this disease and they certainly don't want to get their grandchildren to get it," Bracken said.

"Hopefully one day we'll have people who are surviving Alzheimer's disease, and I really believe through research that could happen."

2nd phase of clinical trials will feature new medical methods

The second phase of clinical trials will feature a new way of administering the drug.

NeuroEPO will be administered through the nasal cavity. This allows the drugto reach it's target in the brain within minutes and avoids the potential for side affects in other organs.

The team will also be bringing in a method of detecting Alzheimer's in the brain that has previously not been available in Saskatchewan. Positron emission tomography imaging allowsresearchers to see beta amyloid plaques a hallmark of Alzheimer's in the brain.

"When you combine these with the traditional cognitive tests that clinicians use to diagnose Alzheimer's disease, this combination allows a better diagnostic clarity," Geyer said.

"It allows them to develop interventions earlier on in the disease cycle and ultimately reduce hospitalization time."

With files from the Afternoon Edition