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Mechanism: Why Does Amyloid Removal Only Slow Decline 27%?

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experiment616 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Amyloid Removal Mechanism Insufficient

Overview

flowchart TD AMYLOID["Amyloid"] CLEARANCE["Clearance"] AMYLOID -->|"exceeds"| CLEARANCE style AMYLOID fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000 style CLEARANCE fill:#81c784,stroke:#333,color:#000

This experiment investigates the fundamental question of why amyloid-clearing antibodies (lecanemab, donanemab) provide only ~27% slowing of cognitive decline despite achieving near-complete plaque removal. Understanding this mechanism is critical for developing more effective therapeutic strategies.

Related: [AD Knowledge Gap #1](/gaps/ad-knowledge-gaps-ranked) | [AD Cure Roadmap](/mechanisms/ad-cure-roadmap) | [Lecanemab Mechanism](/therapeutics/anti-amyloid-therapeutics)

Hypothesis

The hypothesis is that amyloid plaque removal alone is insufficient because:

  • Tau pathology continues unchecked — tau spread continues after amyloid removal, driving neurodegeneration
  • Synaptic loss already occurred — irreversible synaptic damage precedes amyloid clearance
  • Need combination therapy — targeting both amyloid AND tau is required for meaningful disease modification
  • Experimental Design

    Cohort

    • N=200: Participants from CLARITY-AD (lecanemab) or TRAILBLAZER-ALZ 2 (donanemab) with:
    • Complete amyloid PET clearance (Centiloid <10)
    • Baseline and 18-month tau PET (Braak I-III vs IV-VI)
    • CSF biomarkers at baseline, 6, 12, 18 months
    • Cognitive assessments (CDR-SB, MMSE, ADAS-Cog13)

    Primary Endpoints


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