CHICAGO — TauRx Pharmaceuticals' experimental Alzheimer's drug LMTX
failed to improve cognitive and functional skills in patients with mild
to moderate Alzheimer's disease, a large, late-stage study showed.
But in a perplexing twist, the drug did show a
significant benefit in about 15 percent of patients in the trial who
were not taking other standard Alzheimer's drugs, according to the
findings released on Wednesday at the Alzheimer's Association
International Conference in Toronto.
Claude Wischik, co-founder of Singapore-based TauRx and a professor
of geriatric psychiatry at Aberdeen University, said in that so-called
"monotherapy" group, the drug reduced the rate of decline in cognitive
and functional skills by 85 percent.
Dr. Laurie Ryan, chief of the Dementia of Aging
Branch at the National Institute on Aging, called the finding
"intriguing," but said "it doesn't tell us a lot yet at this point."
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Source: NBC News
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