Abstract

AbstractBackgroundIn TRAILBLAZER‐ALZ, donanemab cleared brain amyloid plaques and significantly slowed disease progression in early symptomatic Alzheimer’s disease (AD).MethodsTRAILBLAZER‐ALZ 2 (NCT04437511), a multicenter, randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled trial, enrolled participants with early symptomatic AD and amyloid and tau pathology by positron‐emission tomography. The study randomized participants with low/medium‐tau (n = 1182) and high‐tau (n = 552) pathology (missing tau category, n = 2). Participants (randomized 1:1) received donanemab (n = 860) or placebo (n = 876) intravenously every 4 weeks (w) for 72w. Donanemab participants meeting amyloid clearance treatment completion criteria at 24w or 52w were switched to placebo in a blinded procedure.The primary outcomes were change in Integrated AD Rating Scale (iADRS) score from baseline at 76w in either the low/medium‐tau or combined (low/medium‐tau and high‐tau) populations. Statistical testing allocated most power (80% alpha spend) to low/medium‐tau population outcomes, with the remainder for combined population outcomes, which included clinical and biomarker assessments.ResultsIn the low/medium‐tau population, change in iADRS score at 76w was ‐6.02 with donanemab and ‐9.27 with placebo (difference, 3.25; 95% CI, 1.88 to 4.62; P<0.001), representing a 35.1% slowing of disease progression. Change in Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (CDR) – Sum of Boxes, the key secondary outcome, was 1.20 with donanemab and 1.88 with placebo (difference, ‐0.67; 95% CI ‐0.95 to ‐0.40; P<0.001), representing a 36.0% slowing. Participants receiving donanemab experienced a 38.6% lower risk of progressing to the next disease stage versus placebo over 76w (CDR‐Global score, Hazard Ratio = 0.61; P<0.001). Amyloid clearance at 24w, 52w and 76w was achieved in 34.2%, 71.3% and 80.1% of donanemab‐treated participants, respectively. Plasma P‐tau217 was significantly reduced by 39.3% from baseline with donanemab and increased by 8.4% with placebo at 76w (P<0.001). Significant, positive results across all clinical endpoints were also observed in the combined population. The incidence of serious adverse events was 17.4% (donanemab) and 15.8% (placebo), with three deaths among patients treated with donanemab who experienced serious ARIA. Adverse events with donanemab included amyloid‐related imaging abnormalities (ARIA)‐E (24.0%, 6.1% symptomatic); ARIA‐H (31.4%); and infusion‐related reactions (8.7%).ConclusionDonanemab treatment significantly slowed clinical progression at 76w and had a safety profile consistent with earlier studies.

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