(AP/Alastair Grant)
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A number of Alzheimer's drugs have failed late-stage clinical trials in the past few months
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It's prompting researchers and companies to start focusing on treating people when they're pre-symptomatic
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Treating the disease once symptoms begin to show up, they argue, might be too late to have any real impact on the disease
Alzheimer's affects nearly 5 million Americans, a number that's expected to balloon to 13.8 million by 2050.
The search for a treatment hasn't been going well. There are only four approved drugs that treat the symptoms of the disease, and several hopeful treatments have failed key studies over the last few months.
The recent failures have people contemplating what went wrong — and if it's time to reevaluate how we treat the disease.
One theory people keep coming back to: We might be trying to treat the neurodegenerative disease at the wrong time, when it's too late.
"If you have to wait to start treating when people have symptoms, it's probably too late to have a significant impact," Dr. Matthew Fink, chairman of Neurology at Weill Cornell Medicine told Business Insider in January.
Why starting early could be key
Research has determined that years — even decades — before a person might start showing symptoms, amyloid beta deposits in the brain that are characteristic of Alzheimer's disease can start to accumulate.
There's a simple explanation to why treating these conditions early might be more successful than waiting to treat until a person has symptoms. Here's how Newsweek explained it:
"What’s happening in this early stage of Alzheimer’s can be likened to the kindling that starts a house fire. Amyloid plaques slowly smolder for years, consuming the neuronal tinder in our brains. By the time dementia kicks in, the fire is raging and it’s too late to save the house. Calling in firefighters at that point is a waste of time and money. You need to dial 911 at the first signs of smoke—and the same could be true of when to deliver anti-amyloid drug therapies."
So preventing any progression at that stage is something researchers are pinning a lot of hope on. Newsweek cites five clinical trials that are in the works to determine whether starting early, years before symptoms show up, is the best approach to treating the disease.
Fink pointed to one in particular, going on in Colombia, that's testing out an amyloid-related drug in an extended family with a rare genetic mutation that leads to early-onset Alzheimer's. That study is in people who are still considered cognitively healthy, so if the drug is able to prevent cognitive decline, it could be a breakthrough.