So what
Leading up to yesterday's presentation at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference (AAIC), Annovis Bio tried to convince investors its new drug candidate for Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease could be more effective at improving cognition than
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Biogen. Annovis Bio stock imploded today because data from 14 Alzheimer's disease patients wasn't nearly sufficient to make such a claim.
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After 25 days of treatment, cognition scores, as measured by the ADAS-Cog11 test, improved by 30%, compared to these patients' baseline scores. As is often the case in neuroscience studies, the placebo group also improved. This resulted in a difference between patients who received Phosiphen and the placebo group that wasn't statistically significant.
Cognitive abilities, as measured by the mini-mental state examination (MMSE) after 25 days, were more discouraging. Parkinson's disease patients treated with Posiphen showed no improvement, while the placebo group improved slightly. Both groups of Alzheimer's disease patients showed some improvement on the MMSE, but the placebo group improved slightly more than those given Posiphen.
Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease progress too slowly to expect measurable cognitive improvements in just 25 days, but that didn't stop Annovis from trying. Today's flop was a harsh reminder that Anavex Life Sciences has been testing its lead candidate, blarcamesine, in different forms of dementia for over a decade, and the company still hasn't shown evidence that it significantly reduces cognitive decline for Alzheimer's disease patients, compared to a placebo.
In June, Cassava Sciences told investors its lead candidate simufilam improved ADAS-Cog11 scores by just 18%, compared to baseline after nine months of treatment. Since this was an open-label study, we can't say it wouldn't have been significantly better than a placebo group.