Alzheimer’s Disease and Amyloidosis. Challenges and ideas for treatment. 5

Alzheimer’s Disease and Amyloidosis. Challenges and ideas for treatment. 5

Alzheimer’s Disease and Amyloidosis. Challenges and ideas for treatment. 5

Can we help?

This site is protected by hCaptcha and the hCaptcha Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

How Alzheimer’s disease and amyloidosis differ? What do they have in common? “What makes you demented in Alzheimer’s disease? What makes you lose your cognitive function? It is death of nerve cells, death of cells in the brain. Nobody knows for sure, what causes nerve cells to die. The fact that the amyloid is there is an interesting pathological association. It’s correlated with the disease. It doesn’t mean it causes the disease. World’s top expert on amyloidosis treatment, Dr. Mark Pepys. How might your medication work for the Alzheimer's disease treatment? Dr. Anton Titov, MD. Alzheimer's disease is a very different disease from systemic amyloidosis. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. I have been talking about up till now. In Alzheimer's disease there are amyloid deposits in the brain substance. This you never get with systemic amyloidosis. You can have amyloid in systemic amyloidosis in the membranes that surround the brain. Amyloid is deposited in the blood vessels that supply the brain. But you don't actually have it within the brain substance. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. In Alzheimer's disease there are amyloid deposits in the brain substance. But they are microscopically small. The total amount of amyloid in the brain in Alzheimer's disease is in milligrams. It is a small number of milligrams, maybe a 100 milligrams. Something like that. It is absolutely tiny! Dr. Anton Titov, MD. In clinically manifesting people with Alzheimer's disease there is small amount of amyloid only. It is a very very small amount of amyloid in Alzheimer's disease. There are tiny microscopic plaques. They are called little amyloid deposits. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. The neuropathologists call them plaques. There are other abnormal protein structures. These are called neurofibrillary tangles. They are not actually bona fide amyloid. But they are very similar in terms of the method that proteins are folded, and so on. These are the neuropathological hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease. But they are very very small in amount. In the liver of someone with systemic amyloidosis you might have 5 kilograms of amyloid. It is a completely different situation. 5 kilograms vs. several milligrams? Yes. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. I don't call Alzheimer's disease "amyloidosis". It is very important in medicine to name the disease correctly. Because the neuroscientists and a lot of the biochemists and biophysicists work in this area. But they are not clinical physicians. They use words in a very loose way. This is quite a controversial area. You may be a clinical doctor looking after patients. Dr. Anton Titov, MD. What you call things really matters. You use a specific word, this is one diagnosis, and has one treatment. Then you use that same word for somebody else, who has got a different disease. That requires completely different treatment. It is a disaster! Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. Unfortunately, there is a fashion nowadays. This is probably impossible to overcome. This influence from the basic scientists has strayed into the clinical world to some extent. And people call Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease. They call those diseases “amyloidosis". Because they all share at the molecular level certain similarity. There is a particular method of abnormal structures of proteins. But they are not amyloidosis. In Huntington's disease the abnormal stuff is in the nucleus of the cell. In Parkinson's disease amyloid is in the cytoplasm of the cell. In Alzheimer's disease amyloid is outside the cells. This is well understood. It is like amyloidosis is elsewhere. But all these diseases are completely different. They are more different than trying to do a long jump on Earth, a long jump on the Moon, and a long jump on Mars. Those are different for obvious reasons: no atmosphere, different gravity. But the environment inside the nucleus, in the cytoplasm, and outside the cell is totally different. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. It is very important not to conflate these things. Conflation in this method is very dangerous. Even within systemic amyloidosis you can make a mistake. You make a diagnosis of AL amyloidosis in a patient. The treatment then is cytotoxic chemotherapy. This can kill the patient easily. Chemotherapy for AL amyloidosis does kill patients, because it is very toxic. Other patients with amyloidosis could have a gene mutation. They do not require cytotoxic chemotherapy. To make this mistake is a disaster. Dr. Anton Titov, MD. As clinicians, we are very sensitive to using words properly. That is very important. It underscores the point having a correct general diagnosis, "amyloidosis", "cancer of this organ", is not enough. There has to be a precise and complete diagnosis. Diagnosis has to be precise at the molecular level. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. Absolutely! Because it makes a huge difference in treatment! It absolutely does! The problem is that now people have gone to the molecular level. They say all of these diseases are characterized by misfolded proteins. Misfolded proteins aggregate in a particular way. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. Sure enough, those things are there. But we don't know, in the case of Alzheimer's disease in particular, whether the amyloid plaques have got anything to do with neurodegeneration. Dr. Anton Titov, MD. What makes you demented in Alzheimer's disease? What makes you lose your cognitive function? It is death of nerve cells, death of cells in the brain. We don't know, nobody knows for sure, what causes those nerve cells to die. The fact that the amyloid is there is an interesting pathological association. It is correlated with the disease. It doesn't mean it causes the disease. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. We know that the protein that forms the amyloid fibrils in Alzheimer’s disease. It is called Amyloid beta. It comes from a precursor protein that is on the surface of nerve cells. Precursor protein gets cleaved. This little fragment comes out. It aggregates up and makes amyloid deposits. We know that that pathway from the so-called amyloid precursor protein to the A beta. It makes amyloid fibrils. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. We know that Amyloid beta is closely related to the pathogenesis of the Alzheimer's disease. Because there are some rare families who have mutations in that protein. There are other people who have mutations in the enzymes that process that protein. If you have any of these mutations, this increase the production of the A beta fragment. These patients get hereditary early-onset Alzheimer's disease. Clearly that pathway is important. But exactly what kills the nerve cells is still not known. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. So I don't at the moment consider either Alzheimer's disease or another disease to be the result of amyloid deposition. Type 2 diabetes is another disease where there is always amyloid deposited in the pancreas. Pancreas is a target organ of Type 2 diabetes. We don't know whether these local amyloid deposits actually cause the disease or not. Amyloid deposits are very small in size and amount. They might just be byproducts, side effects, or something like that. We don't know. Dr. Anton Titov, MD. That is the first thing to say about it. Let’s return to my proposals for treatment of Alzheimer's disease. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. Initially I wanted the body to remove the amyloid deposits in the brain in Alzheimer's disease. You can do that by removing the SAP from the brain. You can use our small molecule medication. I still think that is a very good idea. We are about to start a clinical trial to test exactly that therapy in Alzheimer's disease. That was the original rationale. You may find a treatment that makes the amyloid disappear from the brain in people with Alzheimer's disease. Alzheimer's disease stops progressing. Or patients miraculously get better. That is very unlikely once you have lost brain cells. You can't really replace dead neurons. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. You could at least arrest the progression at an early stage of Alzheimer's disease Then it would have a dramatic impact on the clinical picture of the Alzheimer's disease. A treatment that removed amyloid would be a good thing to prove a "yes" or "no" hypothesis. Whether the amyloid deposits themselves do the harm in Alzheimer's disease. But so far nobody's got such a treatment of Alzheimer's disease. Dr. Anton Titov, MD. There have been various attempts to use antibodies against A beta. Antibodies could to do in the brain what I have successfully done with systemic amyloidosis in other organs. Billions of dollars have been spent in clinical trials of Alzheimer's disease. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. They have not yet had any success. There are some possibly promising results most recently. Sometimes you take patients with mild Alzheimer's disease who are treated early on. Then it looks promising. Maybe there is a signal that patients could be improving with the appropriate antibody administration. But it is a long way from being proven. Most of these treatments of Alzheimer's disease have failed due for lack of efficacy or due to toxicity. My treatment method of Alzheimer's disease is different. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. I have got a medication that removes SAP completely. It removes SAP protein more or less completely from the blood. SAP is made only in the liver. There is SAP in the brain. It is normally present at a very low concentration. One thousandth of the concentration that it is in the blood circulation. But removing all the SAP from the blood results in removal of it all from the brain. We have done a preliminary study on 5 patients with Alzheimer's disease. They had our medication for three months. It completely removed all the SAP from the cerebrospinal fluid. CSF bathes the brain. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. Recently we performed animal experiments. We have a model of Alzheimer's disease with amyloid in the brain. We show that our medication removes all the SAP from those amyloid deposits in the brain. There is very strong evidence that the medication will be effective in doing biochemically what we want it to do. Our medication removes the SAP from the amyloid deposits in the brain. That is one avenue to make a medication to treat Alzheimer's disease. That is now an old idea for me. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. I have had that idea for 20 years. Now we are on the verge of testing it. But meanwhile several other laboratories have shown that human SAP is actually toxic for cerebral neurons. Dr. Anton Titov, MD. Sometimes you grow cerebral neurons in a tissue culture. You expose neurons to human SAP. Then neurons die. When I originally saw these research articles about Alzheimer's disease, they looked very interesting. When I read the papers, I was less convinced. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. I wasn't convinced about purity of the protein they were using. They were using commercially bought proteins. This might or might not be authentic, not pure. Who knows how to treat Alzheimer's disease. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. So I was rather skeptical about them. Logically, why would the normal blood protein kill your brain cells? It seems a bit strange! But the fact is this. We can repeat these observations. They are robustly reproducible. Human SAP is bad for cerebral neurons. Neurons die in Alzheimer's disease. SAP protein binds to neurons, it gets inside the cells, it gets into the nucleus of the cells. The cells then die by a process called apoptosis. We don't know the precise molecular mechanisms yet. But it is a reproducible observation using highly purified pharmaceutical-grade SAP. This we uniquely have in our laboratory. This is now a compelling second justification for our medication treatment to remove that protein from the blood and from the brain. My current hypothesis is that SAP contributes to formation and persistence of the amyloid plaques in Alzheimer's disease. SAP is also bad for the brain. In Alzheimer's disease you have these plaques of amyloid and the neurofibrillary tangles. All of this are coated with SAP. Dr. Anton Titov, MD. There is an abnormally increased amount of SAP in the brain in patients with Alzheimer's disease. SAP is bad for the brain. Let's get rid of it! That is the rationale of our clinical trial. This is now funded by the National Institute for Health Research in the UK. Professor Dr. Mark Pepys, MD. We will study 100 patients with Alzheimer's disease in a placebo-controlled double-blind clinical trial. This will take three years. We will see whether it has any impact on everything that can possibly be measured in Alzheimer's disease. This is what we are doing.

More from Brain and Spine
Can dementia be transmitted? Alzheimer’s disease and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Part 1. 10
$0
Clinical case story. 75 y.o. nurse with scoliosis. Neck trauma in college athlete friend of Dr. Fessler. 15
$0
Stem cells in spinal cord injury and ALS treatment. How to avoid charlatans? 13
$0
Stem cells for spine neurodegenerative disease treatment. ALS, poliomyelitis, Multiple sclerosis. 12
$0
Degenerative spine disease. Molecular biology and stem cell therapy. 9
$0
Minimally invasive spine surgery is still controversial. All of it. 8
$0
Recently viewed Expert Conversations

Get your treatment plan refined to perfection by a panel of 3 to 10+ top doctors who are perfect for you.

Get your treatment plan refined to perfection by a panel of 3 to 10+ top doctors who are perfect for you.

Get your treatment plan refined to perfection by a panel of 3 to 10+ top doctors who are perfect for you.


Can we help?

We can find perfect surgeons or medical specialists to perform your treatment.

We can find perfect surgeons or medical specialists to perform your treatment.


How it works
We can find perfect surgeons or medical specialists to perform your treatment.