Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy (Aug 2018)

Pharmacodynamics of atabecestat (JNJ-54861911), an oral BACE1 inhibitor in patients with early Alzheimer’s disease: randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study

  • Maarten Timmers,
  • Johannes Rolf Streffer,
  • Alberto Russu,
  • Yushin Tominaga,
  • Hiroko Shimizu,
  • Ayako Shiraishi,
  • Kanaka Tatikola,
  • Pascale Smekens,
  • Anne Börjesson-Hanson,
  • Niels Andreasen,
  • Jorge Matias-Guiu,
  • Miquel Baquero,
  • Mercè Boada,
  • Ina Tesseur,
  • Luc Tritsmans,
  • Luc Van Nueten,
  • Sebastiaan Engelborghs

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13195-018-0415-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Background β-Secretase enzyme (BACE) inhibition has been proposed as a priority treatment mechanism for Alzheimer’s disease (AD), but treatment initiation may need to be very early. We present proof of mechanism of atabecestat (also known as JNJ-54861911), an oral BACE inhibitor for the treatment of AD, in Caucasian and Japanese populations with early AD who do not show signs of dementia. Methods In two similarly designed phase I studies, a sample of amyloid-positive elderly patients comprising 45 Caucasian patients with early AD diagnosed as preclinical AD (n = 15, Clinical Dementia Rating [CDR] = 0) or with mild cognitive impairment due to AD (n = 30, CDR = 0.5) and 18 Japanese patients diagnosed as preclinical AD (CDR-J = 0) were randomized 1:1:1 to atabecestat 10 or 50 mg or placebo (n = 6–8/treatment) daily for 4 weeks. Safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), and pharmacodynamics (PD) (i.e., reduction of cerebrospinal fluid [CSF] amyloid beta 1–40 [Aβ1–40] levels [primary endpoint] and effect on other AD biomarkers) of atabecestat were evaluated. Results In both populations, atabecestat was well tolerated and characterized by linear PK and high central nervous system penetrance of unbound drug. Atabecestat significantly reduced CSF Aβ1–40 levels from baseline at day 28 in both the 10-mg (67–68%) and 50-mg (87–90%) dose groups compared with placebo. For Caucasians with early AD, the least squares mean differences (95% CI) were − 69.37 (− 72.25; − 61.50) and − 92.74 (− 100.08; − 85.39), and for Japanese with preclinical AD, they were − 62.48 (− 78.32; − 46.64) and − 80.81 (− 96.13; − 65.49), respectively. PK/PD model simulations confirmed that once-daily 10 mg and 50 mg atabecestat can attain 60–70% and 90% Aβ1–40 reductions, respectively. The trend of the reduction was similar across the Aβ1–37, Aβ1–38, and Aβ1–42 fragments in both atabecestat dose groups, consistent with Aβ1–40. CSF amyloid precursor protein fragment (sAPPβ) levels declined from baseline, regardless of patient population, whereas CSF sAPPα levels increased compared with placebo. There were no relevant changes in either CSF total tau or phosphorylated tau 181P over a 4-week treatment period. Conclusions JNJ-54861911 at 10 and 50 mg daily doses after 4 weeks resulted in mean CSF Aβ1–40 reductions of 67% and up to 90% in both Caucasian and Japanese patients with early stage AD, confirming results in healthy elderly adults. Trial registration ALZ1005: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01978548. Registered on 7 November 2013. ALZ1008: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02360657. Registered on 10 February 2015.

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