 |
|
A drug that aims to reduce the
clogging "tangles" in the brain cells of people with Alzheimer's disease
appears promising in early trials, British researchers said on Tuesday as
quoted by media reports.(Fil Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING,
July 30 (Xinhuanet) -- A drug that aims to reduce the clogging "tangles" in the
brain cells of people with Alzheimer's disease appears promising in early
trials, British researchers said on Tuesday as quoted by media reports.
Researchers tested 321 patients with mild to moderate
Alzheimer's disease at 17 centers in the United Kingdom and Singapore for 24
weeks.
They find that in the brain, there are tau proteins
creating untidy mats of fibers called "tangles" that directly link to dementia
in Alzheimer's disease.
The anti-tau drug can attack abnormal tangles and
stabilize the progression of Alzheimer's over 50 weeks.
The new findings are promising, said study lead
author Claude M. Wischik, professor in mental health at the University of
Aberdeen, and chairman of TauRx Therapeutics.
"The data show an 82 percent of reduction in the rate
which the disease progresses," said Wischik.
The study was a Phase II trial. A larger, and
last Phase III drug trial, which looks at whether a drug works in large groups
of people, is scheduled to begin next year.
Alzheimer's disease is incurable at present and is
the most common form of dementia among older people.
(Agencies)