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Efficacy and Safety of Conventional Symptomatic Drugs Combined with Lencanizumab in the Treatment of Early Alzheimer's Disease: a Multicenter, Prospective, Observational Study
Sponsor: First Hospital of China Medical University
Summary
According to the World Health Organization, China will become the "oldest" country in the world by 2050, with 35 percent of the elderly population. At present, in the Chinese population of 60 years old, there are about 15.07 million dementia patients (about 6.0%), about 9.83 million Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients (about 3.9%), and about 38.77 million mild cognitive impairment (Mild cognitive impairment, MCI) patients (about 15.5%). A sharp increase in older people with cognitive impairment will bring a heavy disease burden, and the social cost is almost the sum of cancer, heart disease and stroke. AD is an age-related neurodegenerative disorder characterized by a progressive decline in cognitive function and daily living capacity. The amyloid hypothesis of AD suggests that the deposition of A β is an early and inevitable event in AD pathogenesis. This hypothesis suggests that therapies that slow the deposition of A β plaques in the brain or increase the clearance of A β may slow the progression of the AD clinical syndrome. Most of the disease course of patients with cognitive impairment is more than 10 years long. How to diagnose and treat them in the early stage has become a key link to delay the progression of the disease and reduce the burden. The disease progression of AD is divided into three major stages: preclinical AD (Preclinical AD, Pre-AD), AD-derived mild cognitive impairment (Mild cognitive impairment due to AD, MCI-AD) and AD dementia (which can be subdivided into mild, moderate and severe AD). Among them, MCI-AD and mild AD are collectively known as early AD, which are the earliest clinical symptoms and the best window for identification and intervention. Studies show that about 43.4% of patients with MCI-AD will progress to AD dementia within 4 years, and 80% will progress within 6 years. If the disease advances to moderate or severe AD, patients will develop severe cognitive, functional impairment and behavioral symptoms, which interfere with social function and need help from daily living activities; severe or even complete loss of independence, requiring round-the-clock care. If early diagnosis and effective interventions in the early stages of the disease, it will help delay the disease into the moderate and severe stages, prolong the quality of life of patients, and greatly reduce the social burden of care and treatment. At present, the treatment of AD is mainly symptomatic treatment, mainly including cholinesterase inhibitors and NMDA receptor antagonists. Phase-phase clinical trials show that luncinelizumab has a positive impact on cognitive function and pathological indicators in patients with early AD, delaying the early AD disease process by up to 27% relative to placebo treatment. Lencanizumab, a disease-modifying therapy for early AD, has been approved by FDA and NMPA in China. With the wide clinical application, the clinical efficacy and safety of lencanizumab combined with classical symptomatic therapy have attracted great attention. However, there are still few studies on the clinical characteristics, diagnosis and treatment patterns, efficacy and safety of the combination, and clinical outcomes of patients with early AD in the real world. Based on this, this study intends to conduct an 18-month multi-center prospective real-world observational cohort study exploring the clinical characteristics, diagnosis and treatment patterns, efficacy and safety of the combination, caregiver and family burden of real-world early AD patients (MCI-AD and mild AD).
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
50 Years - 85 Years
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
120
Start Date
2025-04-01
Completion Date
2026-12-31
Last Updated
2025-03-10
Healthy Volunteers
No