WASHINGTON (AP) - In what may be a new warning sign about a once-promising
therapy for Alzheimer's disease, researchers report that in animal studies a
vaccine that clears the brain of toxic deposits also tends to double the risk of
stroke.
Researchers have been intensively studying the idea that the brain-destroying
disease could be controlled by removing deposits of a toxic substance called
amyloid beta that accumulates in the brains of Alzheimer's disease patients,
filling the spaces between cells.
While researchers are uncertain if amyloid beta is the cause of Alzheimer's
or the result of another mind-destroying process, some earlier animal studies
found that a vaccine that prompts the body to remove amyloid beta was able to
stop progression of the disease and even restore some brain function.
The promising results led an Irish pharmaceutical firm, Elan Corp., to test
an amyloid beta vaccine on 360 human patients, but the clinical trial was
suspended early this year after 15 patients developed inflammation of tissues in
the brain. Elan has since said it would no longer test the original vaccine, but
will continue to monitor patients who received it.
Now a new study, appearing Friday in the journal Science, suggests that a
vaccine against amyloid beta may have other problems - a significant increase in
bleeding in the brain.
Swiss, German and American researchers used a lab mouse strain that had been
genetically manipulated to develop the major symptoms of Alzheimer's disease,
including the formation of amyloid beta.
The mice were injected with a vaccine that caused their bodies to make
antibodies against amyloid beta. After five months, the researchers said there
was a 23 percent reduction of the amyloid beta in the test mice compared with
animals that did not receive the vaccine.
However, the test mice also had twice the number of cerebral hemorrhages, or
bleeding in the brain, compared with mice that did not get the vaccine.
Additionally, the researchers found six major blood clots among the immunized
mice, versus only one among the control mice.
The findings, said co-author Dr. Paul M. Mathews of New York University
School of Medicine, suggest that scientists still lack a clear appreciation of
the possible side effects of Alzheimer's vaccine therapy.
"Up to this point, all of the animal studies have been very promising," said
Mathews. "This is the first study to show any serious side effects in mice."
Mathews said the mouse strain used in his study is a closer mimic to the way
Alzheimer's appears in the human brain than animals used in earlier studies. He
said the mice had deposits of amyloid beta on blood vessels, a very common
characteristic of human patients.
Finding this new side effect, he said, suggests that the human trials of
Alzheimer's vaccine "were premature."
"We need to move back into animals and sort this out," said Mathews. "We need
to develop antibodies (vaccines) that don't cause this problem. Otherwise, I
don't think this (type of therapy) will work in humans."
Bill Thies, vice president for medical and scientific affairs of the
Alzheimer's Association, said the new study "is an interesting paper and
something that we should look at carefully."
But he said Alzheimer's vaccine therapy remains promising and research should
be pursued vigorously.
"We are continuing to unravel some of the nuances of it," said Thies.
"Whether it ends up being a useful therapy or not is still an open question, but
it has enough promise that a lot of people are still working on it."
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