The FINANCIAL — INDIANAPOLIS, June 12, 2018 — Eli Lilly and Company and AstraZeneca are discontinuing the global Phase 3 clinical trials of lanabecestat, an oral beta secretase cleaving enzyme inhibitor, for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.
The decision is based on recommendations by an independent data monitoring committee (IDMC) which concluded that both the AMARANTH trial, in early Alzheimer’s disease, and the DAYBREAK-ALZ trial, in mild Alzheimer’s disease dementia, were not likely to meet their primary endpoints upon completion and therefore should be stopped for futility. As a result of this decision, the related AMARANTH extension trial will also be discontinued, according to Lilly.
“The complexity of Alzheimer’s disease poses one of the most difficult medical challenges of our time, and we are deeply disappointed for the millions suffering from this devastating disease,” said Daniel Skovronsky, M.D., Ph.D., president of Lilly Research Labs. “We are grateful for the contributions of the study participants and their families and encourage them to consider other Alzheimer’s disease clinical trials. Lilly remains dedicated to Alzheimer’s disease research as we have been for the last three decades. We won’t give up on finding a solution for Alzheimer’s patients.”
The IDMC recommendation to stop the studies was not based on safety concerns. The Lilly and AstraZeneca BACE Alliance for lanabecestat remains in place, and the companies will now work with the clinical trial sites involved to implement the discontinuations, according to Lilly.
The AMARANTH trial randomized patients with early Alzheimer’s disease to receive lanabecestat, 20mg or 50mg, or placebo orally once daily for 104 weeks. The primary endpoint of the trial was change from baseline on the 13-item Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale – Cognitive Subscale (ADAS-Cog13). Early Alzheimer’s disease is defined as the continuum of patients with mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer’s disease and patients diagnosed with mild Alzheimer’s dementia. Patients who completed the AMARANTH trial were given the opportunity to enroll in the AMARANTH extension trial, where all patients received active treatment.
The DAYBREAK-ALZ trial randomized patients with mild Alzheimer’s disease dementia to receive lanabecestat, 20mg or 50mg, or placebo orally once daily for up to 156 weeks. The primary endpoint of the trial was change from baseline on ADAS-Cog13.
Lilly does not anticipate significant costs associated with this decision and is reaffirming both its financial guidance for 2018 and its mid-term guidance for the remainder of this decade.
Alzheimer’s disease is a fatal illness that causes progressive decline in memory and other aspects of cognition.1 Dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dementia, accounting for 60 to 80 percent of all cases.2 There are currently an estimated 50 million people living with dementia around the world, with numbers expected to increase to nearly 75 million by 2030 and 132 million by 2050. Almost 10 million new cases of dementia are diagnosed each year worldwide, implying one new case approximately every 3 seconds. The current total annual societal and economic estimated cost of dementia is $818 billion USD worldwide and this year may rise above a trillion USD.
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