[HTML][HTML] Potential of low dose leuco-methylthioninium bis (hydromethanesulphonate)(LMTM) monotherapy for treatment of mild Alzheimer's disease: Cohort analysis …

GK Wilcock, S Gauthier, GB Frisoni… - Journal of …, 2018 - content.iospress.com
GK Wilcock, S Gauthier, GB Frisoni, J Jia, JH Hardlund, HJ Moebius, P Bentham, KA Kook…
Journal of Alzheimer's disease, 2018content.iospress.com
Background: LMTM is being developed as a treatment for AD based on inhibition of tau
aggregation. Objectives: To examine the efficacy of LMTM as monotherapy in non-
randomized cohort analyses as modified primary outcomes in an 18-month Phase III trial in
mild AD. Methods: Mild AD patients (n= 800) were randomly assigned to 100 mg twice a day
or 4 mg twice a day. Prior to unblinding, the Statistical Analysis Plan was revised to compare
the 100 mg twice a day as monotherapy subgroup (n= 79) versus 4 mg twice a day as …
Abstract
Background: LMTM is being developed as a treatment for AD based on inhibition of tau aggregation. Objectives: To examine the efficacy of LMTM as monotherapy in non-randomized cohort analyses as modified primary outcomes in an 18-month Phase III trial in mild AD.
Methods: Mild AD patients (n= 800) were randomly assigned to 100 mg twice a day or 4 mg twice a day. Prior to unblinding, the Statistical Analysis Plan was revised to compare the 100 mg twice a day as monotherapy subgroup (n= 79) versus 4 mg twice a day as randomized (n= 396), and 4 mg twice a day as monotherapy (n= 76) versus 4 mg twice a day as add-on therapy (n= 297), with strong control of family-wise type I error.
Results: The revised analyses were statistically significant at the required threshold of p< 0.025 in both comparisons for change in ADAS-cog, ADCS-ADL, MRI atrophy, and glucose uptake. The brain atrophy rate was initially typical of mild AD in both add-on and monotherapy groups, but after 9 months of treatment, the rate in monotherapy patients declined significantly to that reported for normal elderly controls. Differences in severity or diagnosis at baseline between monotherapy and add-on patients did not account for significant differences in favor of monotherapy. Conclusions: The results are consistent with earlier studies in supporting the hypothesis that LMTM might be effective as monotherapy and that 4 mg twice a day may serve as well as higher doses. A further suitably randomized trial is required to test this hypothesis.
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