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DIAN-TU-001 Trial (NCT01760005)
DIAN-TU-001 (NCT01760005)
Overview
The Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network Trial (DIAN-TU-001) is a Phase 2/3 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial evaluating disease-modifying therapies for individuals with autosomal dominant Alzheimer's disease (ADAD). [@diantu] This landmark trial represents the first preventive therapeutic trial in Alzheimer's disease, testing whether anti-amyloid antibodies can delay or prevent cognitive decline when administered years before symptom onset in genetically predisposed individuals.
The trial is conducted through the DIAN network, an international consortium established by the National Institute on Aging (NIA) to study individuals and families with autosomal dominant Alzheimer's disease. [@washington] DIAN-TU-001 uses a innovative adaptive platform design, allowing evaluation of multiple therapeutic agents simultaneously against a common placebo control group. [@dominantly2019]
Significance in Alzheimer's Disease Research
Paradigm Shift: Preventive Treatment
The DIAN-TU trial represents a fundamental shift in AD clinical research:
Traditional Approach:
- Treatment after symptom onset
- Targets established disease
- Modest efficacy in late-stage trials
- Amyloid clearance without cognitive benefit (most trials)
- Treatment before symptoms
- Targets preclinical disease
- Preventive intervention paradigm
- First trial to test pre-symptomatic treatment
Why Autosomal Dominant AD?
ADAD offers unique advantages for preventive trials:
DIAN-TU-001 (NCT01760005)
Overview
The Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network Trial (DIAN-TU-001) is a Phase 2/3 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial evaluating disease-modifying therapies for individuals with autosomal dominant Alzheimer's disease (ADAD). [@diantu] This landmark trial represents the first preventive therapeutic trial in Alzheimer's disease, testing whether anti-amyloid antibodies can delay or prevent cognitive decline when administered years before symptom onset in genetically predisposed individuals.
The trial is conducted through the DIAN network, an international consortium established by the National Institute on Aging (NIA) to study individuals and families with autosomal dominant Alzheimer's disease. [@washington] DIAN-TU-001 uses a innovative adaptive platform design, allowing evaluation of multiple therapeutic agents simultaneously against a common placebo control group. [@dominantly2019]
Significance in Alzheimer's Disease Research
Paradigm Shift: Preventive Treatment
The DIAN-TU trial represents a fundamental shift in AD clinical research:
Traditional Approach:
- Treatment after symptom onset
- Targets established disease
- Modest efficacy in late-stage trials
- Amyloid clearance without cognitive benefit (most trials)
- Treatment before symptoms
- Targets preclinical disease
- Preventive intervention paradigm
- First trial to test pre-symptomatic treatment
Why Autosomal Dominant AD?
ADAD offers unique advantages for preventive trials:
Predictable Timeline:
- Age at onset within families (15-25 years before symptoms)
- Mutation carriers will develop disease (100% penetrance)
- Biomarker changes detectable decades before symptoms
- Enables enrichment for pre-symptomatic participants
- Uniform pathophysiology (single mutation)
- Earlier therapeutic window
- Clear treatment target (amyloid)
- Homogeneous population
Trial Details
| Field | Value |
|-------|-------|
| Trial ID | NCT01760005 |
| Phase | Phase 2/3 |
| Status | Active, Not Recruiting |
| Sponsor | Washington University School of Medicine |
| Collaborators | National Institute on Aging (NIA), Eli Lilly and Company, Roche/Genentech, Avid Radiopharmaceuticals |
| Start Date | 2012 |
| Estimated Completion | 2027 |
Treatment Arms
| Arm | Intervention | Dose | Route |
|-----|-------------|------|-------|
| 1 | Gantenerumab | 255-1200 mg Q2W | Subcutaneous |
| 2 | Solanezumab | 400-1400 mg Q4W | Intravenous |
| 3 | Placebo | N/A | Subcutaneous/IV |
Study Population
- Target Enrollment: 490 participants
- Age Range: 18-80 years
- Condition: Autosomal Dominant Alzheimer's Disease (ADAD)
- Genetic Criteria: PSEN1, PSEN2, or APP mutations with known ADAD causation
Expanded Genetic Background
The genetic basis of ADAD provides critical insights into disease pathogenesis and therapeutic target selection. Understanding the specific mutations helps contextualize the DIAN-TU trial population and informs interpretation of treatment outcomes.
PSEN1 (Presenilin 1) Mutations
PSEN1 located on chromosome 14 is the most common cause of ADAD, accounting for approximately 70-80% of all dominantly inherited cases. Over 300 pathogenic mutations have been identified in PSEN1, making it the single largest genetic contributor to early-onset AD.
Key characteristics of PSEN1 mutations:
- Early onset: Typically 30-50 years of age
- Penetrance: Near 100% for most mutations
- Phenotype: Classical AD presentation with memory impairment
- Progression: Variable rates, generally rapid
PSEN2 (Presenilin 2) Mutations
PSEN2 on chromosome 1 is a rarer cause of ADAD with unique features:
- Late onset: Typically 50-70 years of age
- Incomplete penetrance: Some carriers remain unaffected
- Phenotype: Variable, some behavioral features
- Geographic concentration: More common in certain populations
APP Mutations
The Amyloid Precursor Protein gene on chromosome 21 contains mutations that increase Aβ production or alter the Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio:
- Duplications: APP gene duplication causes autosomal dominant AD
- Point mutations: Multiple pathogenic point mutations identified
- Swedish mutation: K670N/M671L (increased Aβ production)
- London mutation: V717I (increased Aβ42 production)
Interventions
Active Arms
Dosing Schedule
- Intravenous infusion every 4 weeks
- Dose escalation period followed by maintenance dosing
Primary Outcomes
Primary Efficacy Endpoints
Secondary Endpoints
- Brain amyloid PET imaging (SUVr change)
- Brain volume changes (MRI)
- Cognitive subscale scores
- Functional assessment scales
Study Design
Randomization
- 1:1:1 randomization to gantenerumab, solanezumab, or placebo
- Stratified by mutation type, age, and baseline cognitive score
Blinding
- Double-blind design maintained throughout treatment period
- Independent statistical analysis team
Key Findings
Interim Analysis (2019)
- Both gantenerumab and solanezumab showed dose-dependent reduction in brain amyloid
- Solanezumab: 14% reduction in amyloid plaques
- Gantenerumab: up to 59% reduction at highest dose
- No significant cognitive benefit at initial analysis
Updated Results (2022-2024)
- Gantenerumab showed slowing of amyloid plaque accumulation
- Biomarker changes consistent with target engagement
- Ongoing analysis of cognitive outcomes through extended follow-up
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Requirements
Exclusion Criteria
Sites and Locations
The trial is conducted at multiple DIAN sites worldwide:
- Washington University School of Medicine (St. Louis, USA) - Lead site
- University of California (San Francisco, USA)
- Columbia University (New York, USA)
- University of Pittsburgh (USA)
- University of Toronto (Canada)
- University College London (UK)
- Karolinska Institute (Sweden)
- Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology (Japan)
Related Pages
- [Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network (DIAN)](/entities/dian-study)
- [DIAN Observational Study](/entities/dian-observational)
- [Autosomal Dominant Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/autosomal-dominant-alzheimers)
- [Gantenerumab](/proteins/gantenerumab)
- [Solanezumab](/proteins/solanezumab)
- [Amyloid-Targeting Therapies](/mechanisms/amyloid-immunotherapy)
Autosomal Dominant Alzheimer's Disease Background
Genetics of ADAD
Autosomal Dominant Alzheimer's Disease (ADAD) accounts for approximately 1% of all Alzheimer's cases but provides critical insights into disease pathogenesis. Three genes are implicated:
- [PSEN1](/genes/psen1) (Presenilin 1): Most common cause, with over 300 mutations identified
- [PSEN2](/genes/psen2) (Presenilin 2): Rarer, with typically later onset
- [APP](/genes/app) (Amyloid Precursor Protein): Duplications and point mutations
The DIAN-TU trial specifically targets individuals carrying pathogenic mutations in these genes, enabling study of disease mechanisms decades before symptom onset.
Amyloid Hypothesis in DIAN Context
The amyloid cascade hypothesis posits that Aβ accumulation initiates a pathogenic cascade leading to tau pathology, synaptic loss, and cognitive decline. In ADAD:
- Mutation carriers develop Aβ plaques 15-25 years before cognitive symptoms
- This predictable timeline enables preventive interventions
- DIAN-TU tests whether anti-amyloid therapies can delay or prevent cognitive decline when administered pre-symptomatically
Trial Methodology Deep Dive
Pharmacological Interventions
Gantenerumab (Roche/Genentech)
Gantenerumab is a fully human IgG1 monoclonal antibody that binds to aggregated forms of Aβ, including plaques:
- Mechanism: Fc-mediated microglial engagement and plaque removal
- Dosing: Subcutaneous administration every 2 weeks
- Target engagement: Dose-dependent reduction in amyloid PET signal
- Development history: Originally failed in GRADUATE Phase 3; reformulated at higher doses for DIAN
Solanezumab (Eli Lilly)
Solanezumab binds to the central domain of Aβ monomers:
- Mechanism: Soluble Aβ neutralization, not plaque removal
- Dosing: Intravenous infusion monthly
- Target engagement: Increases CSF Aβ40/42 (suggesting redistribution from plaques)
- Development history: Failed in EXPEDITION Phase 3 for sporadic AD; selected for DIAN based on different mechanism
Biomarker Assessment Framework
DIAN-TU employs the ATN (Amyloid, Tau, Neurodegeneration) biomarker framework:
| Biomarker Category | Assessments Used |
|-------------------|------------------|
| A (Amyloid) | CSF Aβ42/40 ratio, Amyloid PET (Pittsburgh compound B) |
| T (Tau) | CSF p-tau181, t-tau; Tau PET |
| N (Neurodegeneration) | MRI volumetrics, FDG-PET, CSF NfL |
Detailed Therapeutic Mechanisms
Gantenerumab Mechanism of Action
Gantenerumab is a fully human IgG1 monoclonal antibody with unique properties:
Binding Characteristics:
- Binds to amino acids 3-16 of Aβ N-terminus
- Prefers aggregated forms (oligomers, plaques)
- Does not bind monomeric Aβ
- High affinity for dense-core plaques
- Fc-mediated microglial engagement
- Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC)
- Complement activation
- Fcγ receptor-mediated phagocytosis
- Dose-dependent plaque reduction (up to 59%)
- Reduced CSF Aβ42 (redistribution from plaques)
- Increased plasma Aβ (peripheral sink)
- ARIA risk at higher doses
Solanezumab Mechanism of Action
Solanezumab has a different mechanism:
Binding Characteristics:
- Binds to mid-domain of Aβ (residues 13-28)
- Prefers monomeric forms
- Does not bind plaques
- Lower affinity than gantenerumab
- Neutralizes soluble Aβ species
- Prevents aggregation into oligomers
- May promote clearance pathways
- No direct plaque binding
- Modest CSF Aβ increase
- No significant plaque reduction
- No ARIA risk (different mechanism)
- Lower potency than gantenerumab
Comparison of Mechanisms
| Property | Gantenerumab | Solanezumab |
|----------|--------------|-------------|
| Target | Plaques + oligomers | Monomers |
| Mechanism | Plaque removal | Neutralization |
| Plaque reduction | Yes (dose-dependent) | No |
| ARIA risk | Yes | No |
| Amyloid PET | Decreases | No change |
| CSF Aβ42 | Increases | Increases |
Biomarker Framework
ATN Classification System
DIAN-TU uses the ATN biomarker framework:
A (Amyloid):
- CSF Aβ42/40 ratio (lower = positive)
- Amyloid PET (SUVr ≥1.2)
- Required for trial enrollment
- CSF p-tau181 (elevated = positive)
- CSF t-tau (elevated = neurodegeneration)
- Tau PET (optional)
- MRI brain volume (reduced = positive)
- FDG-PET hypometabolism
- CSF NfL (elevated = neurodegeneration)
Biomarker Trajectory in ADAD
The biomarker changes follow a predictable pattern:
This sequence enables preventive intervention at stages 1-3.
Genetic Considerations
PSEN1 Mutations
The most common cause of ADAD:
Mutation Characteristics:
- Over 300 pathogenic mutations
- Encoding presenilin-1 (γ-secretase)
- Generally earlier onset
- Highly penetrant
- A246E, H163R, P264L
- Various phenotypic effects
- Variable age at onset
PSEN2 Mutations
Rarer than PSEN1:
Mutation Characteristics:
- ~40 pathogenic mutations
- Encoding presenilin-2
- Later onset than PSEN1
- Reduced penetrance in some
APP Mutations
Rare cause of ADAD:
Mutation Characteristics:
- Duplications
- Point mutations at cleavage sites
- Swedish mutation (KM670/671NL)
- London mutation (V717I)
Clinical Trial Logistics
Site Requirements
DIAN-TU sites must meet rigorous standards:
Clinical Infrastructure:
- Memory disorders clinic
- Neurology department
- Research nursing
- Clinical trial infrastructure
- MRI facilities
- PET imaging (amyloid, tau)
- CSF collection and processing
- Genetic testing
- Biomarker assays
- Sample storage
Participant Burden
Trial participation requires significant commitment:
Visit Schedule:
- Monthly visits for first year
- Every 3 months thereafter
- 52 weeks primary endpoint
- Extended follow-up
- Cognitive testing (2-3 hours)
- MRI scans
- PET scans (baseline, 52 weeks)
- CSF collection
- Blood draws
Future Directions
Next-Generation Trials
DIAN-TU informs future preventive trials:
Expanding Pipeline:
- New anti-amyloid antibodies
- Anti-tau therapies
- Combination approaches
- Neuroprotective agents
- Sporadic AD prevention
- Down syndrome population
- Earlier intervention
- Broader biomarker enrollment
Lessons for the Field
The DIAN-TU trial provides key lessons:
Cognitive Outcome Measures
DIAN Multivariate Cognitive Composite (DIAN-MCC)
The primary cognitive endpoint uses a composite sensitive to early changes:
- Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT): Verbal memory
- Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST): Processing speed
- Category Fluency: Semantic memory
- Trail Making Test Part A: Attention and psychomotor speed
Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR)
The CDR remains the gold standard for staging:
- CDR 0: Cognitively normal
- CDR 0.5: Mild cognitive impairment
- CDR 1: Mild dementia
- CDR 2: Moderate dementia
- CDR 3: Severe dementia
Statistical Analysis Plan
Sample Size Considerations
With 490 participants and anticipated ~30% mutation carrier rate in placebo arm:
- Power calculations: 80% power to detect 50% slowing of cognitive decline
- Multiple comparison adjustments: Primary analysis uses Hochberg procedure
- Missing data handling: Multiple imputation under MAR assumption
Extended Statistical Framework
Primary Analysis Specifications
The statistical analysis plan defines rigorous methods:
Multiple Comparison Procedures
Given multiple treatment arms and endpoints:
- Primary analysis: Hochberg procedure for multiple comparisons
- Control of family-wise error rate: ≤0.05 (two-sided)
- Secondary confirmatory: Graphical approach for gatekeeping
Sensitivity Analyses
Pre-specified sensitivity analyses include:
Biomarker Correlations
Amyloid Biomarkers
| Biomarker | Fluid | Imaging | Readout |
|-----------|-------|---------|----------|
| CSF Aβ42 | ✓ | - | Concentration |
| CSF Aβ40 | ✓ | - | Concentration |
| PET PiB | - | ✓ | SUVr |
| PET Florbetapir | - | ✓ | SUVr |
Tau Biomarkers
| Biomarker | Fluid | Imaging | Readout |
|-----------|-------|---------|----------|
| CSF t-tau | ✓ | - | Concentration |
| CSF p-tau181 | ✓ | - | Concentration |
| CSF p-tau217 | ✓ | - | Concentration |
| Tau PET | - | ✓ | SUVr |
Neurodegeneration Biomarkers
| Biomarker | Fluid | Imaging | Readout |
|-----------|-------|---------|----------|
| MRI volumetrics | - | ✓ | Volume change |
| FDG-PET | - | ✓ | Metabolism |
| CSF NfL | ✓ | - | Concentration |
| CSF NfH | ✓ | - | Concentration |
Enrichment Strategies
The trial employs biomarker enrichment:
- CSF biomarker positivity: Required for full analysis population
- Genetic confirmation: Documented mutation carrier status
- Age at symptom onset estimation: Based on family history
Amyloid Pathology in ADAD
Amyloid Cascade in Autosomal Dominant AD
The amyloid cascade hypothesis is directly testable in ADAD:
Aβ Production:
- Pathogenic mutations increase Aβ production
- PSEN mutations enhance Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio
- APP duplications increase total Aβ
- 100% of mutation carriers develop Aβ deposits
- 20-25 years before symptoms: Aβ PET positive
- 15-20 years before symptoms: CSF Aβ42 reduced
- 10-15 years before symptoms: tau changes begin
- Symptom onset: neurodegeneration established
- Early intervention possible before symptoms
- Amyloid clearance may prevent downstream effects
- Optimal treatment before tau spread
- Window for disease modification
Amyloid PET Imaging
The trial uses amyloid PET as a key biomarker:
Imaging Agent:
- 11C-PiB (Pittsburgh compound B)
- 18F-florbetapir (Amyvid)
- 18F-florbetaben (Neuraceq)
- SUVr ≥1.2 = amyloid positive
- Cortical binding pattern
- Gray matter specificity
- Strong correlation with CSF Aβ42
- Predicts cognitive decline
- Therapeutic target engagement
Trial Design Considerations
Adaptive Platform Design
DIAN-TU pioneered adaptive platform trials in AD:
Platform Advantages:
- Multiple drugs, single placebo arm
- Shared infrastructure
- Efficient patient enrollment
- Accelerated development
- Biological rationale
- Safety profile
- Manufacturing feasibility
- Regulatory alignment
- Dose adjustments
- Population enrichment
- Endpoint modifications (pre-specified)
Statistical Considerations
Sample Size Calculations:
- Based on expected effect size
- Assumes 50% slowing
- Accounts for dropout
- Power: 80%
- Hochberg procedure
- Control family-wise error rate
- Pre-specified hierarchies
- Secondary endpoints exploratory
- Multiple imputation
- Last observation carry forward
- Sensitivity analyses
Lessons for Prevention Trials
Enrollment Strategies
Recruitment in rare populations requires:
Family-Based Approaches:
- Extended family screening
- At-risk relative identification
- Genetic counseling services
- Multi-generational enrollment
- Global site distribution
- Local recruitment
- Cultural adaptation
- Regulatory harmonization
- Long-term engagement
- Transportation support
- Compensation
- Caregiver support
Long-Term Follow-Up
Preventive trials require extended observation:
Timeframe Considerations:
- Decades needed for primary endpoints
- Ethical considerations
- Drug supply challenges
- Participant burden
- Open-label extensions
- Registry follow-up
- Natural history studies
- Deferred treatment
Future Directions
Expansions to Sporadic AD
The DIAN-TU model is informing sporadic AD prevention:
A4 Study (Anti-Amyloid in Asymptomatic AD):
- Cognitively normal
- Amyloid PET positive
- Solanezumab treatment
- Primary prevention trial
- Similar design
- Broader population
- Multiple biomarkers
- Prevention focus
New Therapeutic Targets
DIAN-TU expanded beyond amyloid:
Tau-Targeting:
- Anti-tau antibodies
- Tau aggregation inhibitors
- Tau PET ligands
- Synaptic functional recovery
- Synaptic density PET
- Neuroprotective agents
- Microglial modulators
- Anti-inflammatory approaches
- TREM2 targeting
Impact on Alzheimer's Disease Research
Paradigm Shifts Enabled
DIAN-TU has influenced the broader AD research field:
Lessons Learned
What Worked
- Family-based recruitment through DIAN network
- Centralized biomarker core facilities
- Standardized cognitive assessment training
- International site coordination
Challenges
- Slow enrollment due to rarity of ADAD
- Drug supply interruptions
- COVID-19 pandemic impacts
- Regulatory complexities of multi-national platform
Comparative Analysis
DIAN-TU vs. Sporadic AD Trials
Comparing features of DIAN-TU to typical sporadic AD trials:
| Feature | DIAN-TU | Sporadic AD Trials |
|---------|---------|--------------------|
| Enrollment | Family-based | Individual |
| Age range | Variable | Generally older |
| Biomarkers | Required | Optional |
| Timing | Pre-symptomatic | Symptomatic |
| Outcome | Delay onset | Slow progression |
Implications
Key insights from this comparison:
Extended Genetic Analysis
Mutation-Specific Considerations
Different PSEN1 mutations show phenotypic variation:
| Mutation | Age of Onset | Cognitive Profile | Progression |
|----------|--------------|-------------------|--------------|
| A431E | 33-35 | Rapid | Fast |
| L286P | 38-42 | Typical | Variable |
| H163R | 45-50 | Behavioral | Moderate |
| M146L | 48-55 | Typical | Slow |
Geographic Distribution
Global distribution of ADAD mutations:
- North America: PSEN1 dominant
- Europe: Mixed distribution
- Asia: PSEN1 and APP more common
- Colombia: PSEN1 E280A founder effect
Drug Development Insights
Anti-Amyloid Antibody Development
Gantenerumab Development History
Gantenerumab (RO4904986) has undergone extensive development:
Solanezumab Development History
Solanezumab (LY2062430) has complementary history:
Regulatory Considerations
FDA Engagement
The DIAN-TU program has engaged with FDA:
- INDClearance: Multiple INDs for each agent
- Special protocol assessments: Protocol guidance
- Accelerated approval: Based on biomarker endpoints
- Real-time oncology: Not applicable
Global Regulatory Strategy
International regulatory considerations:
- FDA: US registration
- EMA: European submission
- PMDA: Japanese collaboration
- Health Canada: Canadian sites
Trial Infrastructure
Site Network
The DIAN-TU network includes:
| Region | Sites | Countries |
|--------|------|------------|
| North America | 15 | US, Canada |
| Europe | 12 | UK, Germany, Sweden |
| Asia-Pacific | 5 | Japan, Australia |
Centralized Resources
Core facilities support the trial:
Long-Term Follow-Up
Participant Outcomes
Participants completing DIAN-TU may:
Data Sharing
DIAN data enables research:
- Qualified researchers: Access applications
- Publication policies: Authorship guidelines
- External science platform: Data access
Family Perspectives
Genetic Counseling
DIAN provides genetic counseling:
Research Participation Motivations
Participants join for various reasons:
Future Directions
Next Generation Trials
DIAN-TU informs future trials:
Biomarker Development
Future biomarker needs:
Amyloid Cascade in ADAD
Molecular Pathogenesis
The amyloid cascade hypothesis in ADAD context proposes:
Therapeutic Implications
Key implications for therapy:
Clinical Outcome Measures
Detailed Cognitive Assessments
The cognitive assessments used in DIAN-TU include:
Primary Cognitive Composite (DIAN-MCC)
| Component | Test | Domain |
|-----------|------|--------|
| Memory | RAVLT | Verbal learning |
| Attention | DSST | Processing speed |
| Language | Category fluency | Semantic memory |
| Executive | Trail Making A | Psychomotor speed |
Secondary Measures
| Measure | Domain | Administration |
|---------|--------|----------------|
| MMSE | Global cognition | Annual |
| CDR | Clinical staging | Annual |
| FCSRT | Episodic memory | Annual |
| Trail Making B | Executive function | Annual |
Imaging Biomarkers
Advanced Imaging Protocol
DIAN-TU employs comprehensive imaging:
MRI Protocol
- T1-weighted: Volumetric analysis
- T2/FLAIR: White matter lesions
- Diffusion tensor: White matter integrity
- Resting state fMRI: Functional connectivity
- Amyloid PET: Florbetapir/florbetaben
- Tau PET: MK-6240 or FTP
- FDG-PET: Glucose metabolism
Biological Sample Collection
Biospecimen Processing
DIAN-TU collects multiple biospecimens:
| Specimen | Collection | Processing |
|----------|-------------|------------|
| CSF | Lumbar puncture | Aliquoted, frozen |
| Blood | Venipuncture | Plasma, serum, DNA |
| Urine | Spot collection | Aliquoted, frozen |
Quality Assurance
Site Certification
Sites must meet quality standards:
Participant Retention
Retention Strategies
Maintaining participant engagement:
Scientific Publications
Publication Policy
Data sharing and publication:
Clinical Trial Design Philosophy
Why this Design Works
The DIAN-TU adaptive platform design offers several advantages:
Limitations and Mitigation
Acknowledged limitations with mitigation strategies:
| Limitation | Mitigation |
|------------|------------|
| Small population | International network |
| Variable onset age | Biomarker enrichment |
| Long timecourse | Surrogate endpoints |
| Multiple mutations | Genetic stratification |
Funding and Support
Grant Support
DIAN-TU is funded through:
- National Institute on Aging: Primary funder
- Foundation grants: Alzheimer's Association
- Industry partnerships: Roche, Lilly
- International contributions: Multiple sources
Education and Training
Standardized Training
Sites receive comprehensive training:
Emergency Procedures
Safety Monitoring
Comprehensive safety oversight:
Related Pages
- [Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network (DIAN Study)](/entities/dian-study)
- [DIAN Observational Study](/entities/dian-observational)
- [Autosomal Dominant Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/autosomal-dominant-alzheimers)
- [Gantenerumab](/proteins/gantenerumab)
- [Solanezumab](/proteins/solanezumab)
- [Anti-Amyloid Immunotherapy](/mechanisms/amyloid-immunotherapy)
- [Presenilin 1 (PSEN1) Gene](/genes/psen1)
- [Presenilin 2 (PSEN2) Gene](/genes/psen2)
- [Amyloid Precursor Protein (APP) Gene](/genes/app)
Key Takeaways
Why DIAN-TU Matters
Clinical Significance
The implications extend beyond this trial:
For Patients:
- Family members can be screened and potentially enrolled
- Early identification enables planning
- Research participation provides access to new therapies
- Hope for future prevention
- Genetic counseling services
- Family screening programs
- Intergenerational research opportunities
- Support for rare disease communities
- Trial design model
- Biomarker validation data
- Natural history information
- Collaborative infrastructure
- Prevention paradigm validation
- Platform trial design
- Regulatory precedent
- Funding models
Current Status
- Enrollment: Complete (490 participants)
- Primary Endpoint: Expected 2027
- Drug Effects: Gantenerumab shows amyloid reduction; cognitive data pending
- Future: Next-generation trials expanding to sporadic AD
Implications for Alzheimer's Disease
If preventive treatment succeeds:
- Treatment could begin decades before symptoms
- Biomarker screening enables early identification
- Combination approaches may provide additional benefit
- Could transform AD from inevitable to preventable
Additional Perspectives
Participant Experience
Trial participants and families have shared important perspectives:
Motivation for Participation:
- Family history motivates action
- Desire to help future generations
- Access to expert care
- Contributing to science
- Frequent visits over extended period
- Invasive procedures (lumbar punctures)
- Uncertainty about drug assignment
- Long-term commitment
- Contributing to breakthrough
- Advanced monitoring
- Access to treatments
- Community connection
Research Infrastructure
DIAN-TU established important infrastructure:
Data Sharing:
- Centralized database
- Standardized protocols
- Open science policies
- Collaborative analyses
- CSF repository
- DNA repository
- Brain bank linkage
- Long-term storage
- MRI archives
- PET archives
- Standardized processing
- Multi-center validation
Scientific Publications
The trial has generated numerous publications:
Trial Design:
- Rationale and design papers
- Statistical analysis plans
- Regulatory interactions
- Methodological papers
- ATN validation
- Baseline characteristics
- Correlation studies
- Method development
- Primary results
- Secondary analyses
- Subgroup studies
- Long-term follow-up
Global Health Context
AD represents a major global health challenge:
Epidemiology:
- 55 million people with dementia worldwide
- AD is 60-70% of cases
- 10 million new cases annually
- Projected doubling by 2050
- Annual cost: $1.3 trillion (2023)
- Direct and indirect costs
- Caregiver burden
- Healthcare system strain
- Growing but insufficient
- Need for preventive approaches
- Platform trials efficiency
- International collaboration
See Also
- [Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease)
- [Parkinson's Disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease)
External Links
- [DIAN Program Website](https://dian.wustl.edu/)
- [ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01760005](https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT01760005)
- [PubMed](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/)
- [KEGG Pathways](https://www.genome.jp/kegg/pathway.html)
References
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