View clinical trials related to Alzheimer Disease.
Filter by:The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of 2 fixed dose of MT-4666 administered once daily for 52 weeks with or without receiving a concomitant acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs), in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's Disease (AD).
This is a Phase 2 study to evaluate safety and efficacy in participants with Mild Cognitive Impairment due to Alzheimer's Disease/Prodromal Alzheimer's Disease (referred to as MCI/Prodromal) and mild to moderate dementia due to Alzheimer's Disease (referred to as mild to moderate AD). This study will have a Core Phase and an Extension Phase.
It is currently accepted that depression during midlife is a risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Furthermore, several prospective population studies have demonstrated that depression is an independent risk factor for incident dementia of different types (e.g. vascular, mixed, Alzheimer's disease). However, it is not clear, what are the mechanisms that link depression and dementia, and if depression can be a prodromal manifestation of AD. There are also studies that suggest that depression could be an initial sign of AD. Objective: 1. Demonstrate that late life depression (over 60 years of age) constitutes the first manifestation of AD. 2. Define by rating scales and life stressors have differential risk profiles evolutionary AD. 3. To study the relationship between the subtypes of depression and CSF biomarkers, neurophycological test and evolution to AD.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of pioglitazone at 24 months compared with placebo on cognitive decline in high-risk participants who have completed the AD-4833/TOMM40_301 study [NCT01931566] with an adjudicated diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) due to Alzheimer's Disease (AD).
Dementia with Lewy body (DLB) is the second most common neurodegenerative dementia in autopsy series. However, DLB represents a small proportion of the clinical diagnoses in epidemiology registries. Indeed Alzheimer disease (AD) and DLB are often concomitant, they share many symptoms and only a small weight is given to non-motor symptoms in DLB diagnosis. DLB is at the end of a pathological spectrum overlapping with AD, explaining the poor diagnostic value of both diagnostic criteria. To date there is still a need for a tool able to discriminate patients with pure DLB from those expressing common signs with both AD and DLB and those with pure AD. The purpose of this study is to validate a semi quantitative scale designed to reflect the Lewy Bodies burden in patients with mild to moderate cognitive decline. The investigators hypothesized that the score obtained may differentiate between AD, DLB and patients fulfilling clinical criteria for both DLB an AD. This score could also be correlated with dopaminergic depletion assessed with [18F]fluorodopa PET/computed tomography and/or with potential biomarkers of ADD measured in cerebrospinal fluid. This clinical validation is a preliminary work preceding further studies correlating the LeSCoD score with functional imaging features, prognosis and therapeutic response. Thus, the expected outcomes involve an improvement in demented patients' care, as well as a better patient selection for further therapeutic studies
In France, an estimated 860 000 patients are affected by Alzheimer Disease (AD) which represents, as in other developed countries, a major public health issue. In many cases, AD diagnosis is uncertain and its clinical evolution unpredictable. The exactitude of the diagnosis is however particularly important in the perspective of the validation and use of new therapeutic strategies in AD. Detection of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) diagnosis biomarkers fell short in the detection, of atypical/mixed cases, of some differential diagnosis, and in differentiating rapid or slow clinical evolutions. Hence, CSF analysis gives a unique opportunity to detect and validate biomarkers in many neurological disorders. Nevertheless, in medical practice, CSF biological analysis is currently limited to a small number of analytes.Quantitative and targeted mass spectrometry, especially operated in the Multiple reaction monitoring mode (MRM), represents an alternative to immunodetection and could be used to detect specific biomarkers in complex matrices such as plasma by specifically discriminating the proteotypic peptides corresponding to each proteins. Mass spectrometry has also the ability to distinguish and quantify isotopically labelled and unlabeled selected targets. This ability was used in a publication by the group of R. Bateman (Washington University, St Louis, USA) who could, after administering stable isotope-labelled leucine, evaluate Ab synthesis and clearance in humans. This approach has an enormous potential to study the metabolism of proteins within the human CNS and consequently help in the understanding and diagnosis of neurological disorders.The main objective of this program is set up a targeted quantitative mass spectrometry method for existing and stable isotope-labelled CSF biomarkers in the neurological field; exploit this approach for diagnostic purpurses and to gain knowledge in the pathophysiology of diseases.
Difference in nutritional status between patients with mild and moderate Alzheimer's Disease (AD) and cognitively intact healthy people in an Asian population
Study to assess symptomatic efficacy, safety and tolerability of talsaclidine in patients with mild to moderate dementia of Alzheimer type
Safety and tolerability. Quality of life (EQ-5D, ACQLI) and health economic impact (health resource utilisation, living and employment status) assessments, will not be performed at the centers in the united kingdom (UK)
The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of lanabecestat compared with placebo administered for 104 weeks in the treatment of early Alzheimer´s disease. The study will test the hypothesis that lanabecestat is a disease-modifying treatment for participants with early Alzheimer´s disease, defined as the continuum of participants with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) due to Alzheimer´s disease and participants diagnosed with mild dementia of the Alzheimer´s type, as measured by change from baseline on the 13-item Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale - Cognitive Subscale (ADAS-Cog13) score at week 104 in each of the 2 lanabecestat treatment groups compared with placebo.