Alzheimer’s & Dementia: Translational Research & Clinical Interventions (Apr 2025)
Assessing clinical meaningfulness in clinical trials for Alzheimer's disease: A U.S. regulatory perspective
Abstract
Abstract In the context of recent approvals of amyloid‐directed monoclonal antibodies for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease (AD) by the United States (U.S.) Food and Drug administration (FDA), there has been much public discussion regarding the meaningfulness of the treatment effects demonstrated with these drugs in clinical trials. There are a variety of regulatory approaches to evaluate how results on a clinical endpoint reflect a meaningful effect of an intervention, including qualitative and quantitative methodologies. This article will discuss regulatory considerations for clinical benefit across the stages of AD, approaches to the assessment of clinical meaningfulness in clinical trials, and FDA's assessment of clinical benefit in the recent traditional approvals of amyloid‐directed monoclonal antibodies for the treatment of AD. Highlights Assessment of clinical benefit will depend on the stage of Alzheimer's disease (AD) being studied, the clinical symptoms or findings that occur at that stage of disease, and the mechanism of the drug and its anticipated effects. It is critical to obtain input from patients and caregivers with lived experience to understand their perspectives on clinical benefit. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) encourages the use of clinically meaningful within‐patient change, which captures the assessment of improvement or decline based on the perspective of the individual patient, to assess meaningful score differences.
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