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Alzheimer’s Approach
Shows Potential
January 12, 2010
In the early stages of Alzheimer’s
disease, patients typically suffer a major loss of the brain connections
necessary for memory and information processing. Now, a combination of
nutrients that was developed at MIT has shown the potential to improve
memory in Alzheimer’s patients by stimulating growth of new brain
connections.
Richard Wurtman, the
Cecil H. Green Distinguished Professor of Brain and Cognitive Sciences
In a clinical trial of 225 Alzheimer’s patients, researchers found that
a cocktail of three naturally occurring nutrients believed to promote
growth of those connections, known as synapses, plus other ingredients
(B vitamins, phosopholipids and antioxidants), improved verbal memory in
patients with mild Alzheimer's.
“If you can increase the number of synapses by enhancing their
production, you might to some extent avoid that loss of cognitive
ability,” says Richard Wurtman, the Cecil H. Green Distinguished
Professor of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, who did the basic research
that led to the new experimental treatment. He is an author of a paper
describing the new results in the journal Alzheimer’s and Dementia.
There is currently no cure for Alzheimer’s disease, though some
medications can slow the progression of the disease. In particular, many
U.S. patients take cholinesterase inhibitors, which increase levels of
acetylcholine, a neurotransmitter important for learning and memory.
While those treatments target the symptoms of Alzheimer’s, Wurtman hopes
to attack what he believes is the root cause of the disease: loss of
synapses. The three nutrients in his dietary cocktail — uridine, choline
and the omega-3 fatty acid DHA (all normally present in breast milk) —
are precursors to the fatty molecules that make up brain cell membranes,
which form synapses.
In animal studies, Wurtman has shown that these nutrients boost the
number of dendritic spines (small outcroppings of neural membranes).
When those spines contact another neuron, a synapse is formed.
Three additional clinical studies in Alzheimer’s patients are now
underway, one in the United States and two in Europe. Results are
expected to be available between 2011 and 2013.
The first clinical study was sponsored by the French company Danone,
known in the United States as Dannon; the study was conducted primarily
in Europe and was led by Philip Scheltens, director of the Alzheimer
Center at Vrije Universiteit Medical Center in Amsterdam. Wurtman and
MIT have patented the mixture of nutrients used in the study, and
Nutricia Advanced Medical Nutrition, a unit of Danone, holds the
exclusive license on the patent.
Patients with mild Alzheimer’s drank the cocktail (made in the form of a
nutrient drink called Souvenaid, with the collaboration of Danone) or a
control beverage daily for 12 weeks. Patients who received the nutrients
showed a statistically significant level of improvement compared to
control subjects: 40 percent of the treated patients improved
performance in a test of verbal memory (memory for words, as opposed to
memory of locations or experiences) known as the Wechsler Memory Scale,
while 24 percent of patients who received the control drink improved
their performance. Among those who received the cocktail, patients with
the mildest cases of Alzheimer’s showed the most improvement.
The
drink appeared to have no effect on patients’ performance in another
commonly used evaluation for Alzheimer’s patients, the ADAS-cog test.
Wurtman believes that is because ADAS-cog is a more general assessment
that tests for orientation and movement/spatial memory as well as
cognition. So in subjects with early Alzheimer's who show principally
cognitive changes, more than the 225 subjects in the first study will
probably be required to yield significant ADAS-cog changes after
Souvenaid. The 500 subjects in the ongoing study in the United States
may be sufficient.
John Growdon, a neurologist at Massachusetts General Hospital, says that
trying to regrow synapses is an innovative strategy and offers a
complementary approach to two other lines of attack in treating
Alzheimer’s: targeting the amyloid plaques that accumulate in patients’
brains, and minimizing the damage done by toxic metabolites that build
up in Alzheimer’s-affected brains.
“I don’t think any one approach has a monopoly, and that’s good,”
Growdon says. “You need to have a lot of different approaches because no
one knows what’s going to work.”
Wurtman believes his approach to Alzheimer’s may eventually prove
beneficial in treating other diseases. If these nutrients prove to be
successful in Alzheimer’s patients, “then you can think about other
diseases in which there are too few synapses,” such as Parkinson’s
disease, he says. “There are a lot of diseases associated with synapse
deficiency.” |