Overexpression of neurotoxic proteins disrupts axonal transport, the information highway of the nervous system, causing inflammation, loss of function, and nerve cell death - all hallmarks of a wide range of neurodegenerative diseases including AD and PD. Annovis’ drug acts through a novel mechanism of action that inhibits all the major neurotoxic proteins responsible for AD and PD even before they are produced. This contrasts with other companies’ AD and PD drugs which remove only one of the toxic proteins after it is produced.
The combined findings from the posters tell the story of an exceptionally promising treatment for neurodegenerative disease such as AD and PD. First, in a mouse model of AD buntanetap inhibits toxic proteins in the brain, improves axonal transport, lowers inflammation, and protects nerve cells from dying. This is associated with improved movement and cognition.
Second, these findings are replicated in all the human AD and PD phase I and II trials to date, with decreased toxic proteins in the brain, improved axonal transport, lowered inflammation, and protection of neurons from dying. In both mice and humans, not only has buntanetap been safe and very well tolerated, but it has also been effective in actually improving movement and cognition. In addition, there is evidence of a dose-response relationship in mice and in humans between the drug dose administered and the inhibition of the neurotoxic proteins.
In “Interim Analysis Results of Buntanetap in Phase III Clinical Studies in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Disease,” which analyzed data from patients in both AD and PD phase II trials who received different doses of the drug, Annovis showed that buntanetap is safe, well-tolerated, and efficacious both in patients with AD and with PD. The interim analyses confirm that Annovis has the right sample size for clinical trials and support further development of buntanetap in phase III trials as a potential treatment for both AD and PD.
A third poster was presented by
These results showed evidence that buntanetap lowers the rate of production of APP, suggesting a dose-response relationship. For the design of future studies, the methodology is helpful for evaluating the body’s response to different doses of drug in terms of inhibition of production of APP and is important in determining the optimal dosage in future phase II and III trials.
“Together these results are exciting because they confirm buntanetap’s mechanism of action and that the drug is safe and effective,” said
Each year, the AAIC convenes the leading basic scientists, clinical researchers, clinicians, and the care research community to share breaking research in the study and treatment of AD.
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