Waiting for lecanémab, a drug that slows the progression of Alzheimer’s

The diagnosis was made about three months ago following a positron emission tomography (PET) scan (PET scan) of the brain. Normand Viau’s small memory losses were indeed due to Alzheimer’s disease. Since this verdict, Mr. Viau’s family has placed great hope in lecanémab, the first drug to act on the causes of Alzheimer’s disease which, according to studies, slows cognitive decline by approximately 30%. The problem: this drug that was approved in the United States a year ago is still not approved here. Health Canada is still studying the file, which was submitted on June 10, 2023.

Mr. Viau is one of the patients who could receive lecanémab (trade name Leqembi), because his condition fully meets the eligibility criteria. First, he only has mild cognitive impairment, a sign that he is only at the very beginning of the disease. “My memory is starting to weaken, but I am in good shape, I do sports every day,” he said in an interview. “We need to repeat it more often, but he is still as ingenious in all the little “patents”. It is especially at the business level that it has become more complex,” adds his wife.

Second criterion: THE PET scan highlighted the presence of amyloid plaques, biological proof that “he actually has Alzheimer’s disease, and not dementia of vascular origin,” said Dr.r Simon Ducharme, neuropsychiatrist and clinician-researcher at The Neuro and the Douglas Research Center.

“There are other criteria that could make a patient not eligible for this treatment, including if they suffer from other illnesses or if they are taking other medications that could interact with lecanemab and which could put him at risk of complications. For example, patients taking anticoagulants, blood thinning medications, will likely be excluded,” adds Dr.r Fadi Massoud, geriatrician at Charles-Le Moyne hospital and at the MoCA clinic.

According to a study published a few months ago, “there are less than 10% of patients [atteints de la maladie d’Alzheimer] which would be admissible for reasons of all kinds. So, even if the drug arrives on the market, its administration risks being restricted to a minority of patients,” summarizes the Dr Massoud.

A prohibitive cost

Furthermore, access to lecanemab will not be affordable to all eligible patients due to its prohibitive cost. The treatment, which normally lasts 18 months, could cost up to $30,000. To this will be added the costs of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examinations of the brain (approximately $1,000 each), which must be carried out periodically during treatment in order to check that the patient does not present cerebral edema or cerebrovascular accidents (CVA), two possible side effects of treatment and which, “in many patients, do not give symptoms”, underlines the Dr Massoud.

If such costs are not reimbursed by the Ministry of Health and Social Services (MSSS), many patients will not be able to cover them and, therefore, will not be able to benefit from treatment. This is the case of Sylvain Langlois, aged 57, who suffers from a familial form of Alzheimer’s disease (his mother died and his sister suffers from it). Mr. Langlois would be an ideal candidate for lecanémab treatment, according to the DD Marie-Pierre Thibodeau, geriatrician at the CHUM cognition clinic, who wholeheartedly hopes that her patient will be able to receive it.

Mr. Langlois’s wife also has great hope for this new treatment. “I’m so clinging to this medicine because my husband is so young. He took all the exams [PET scan, IRM] which are required to receive the treatment, he is ready to receive it. But it would have to be reimbursed because my husband does not have insurance,” she says with emotion.

Once the drug has received Health Canada’s approval, it can be prescribed, but it will have to be evaluated by the Institut national d’excellence en santé et en services sociaux (INESSS), which “will recognize or not its therapeutic value and recommend or not its reimbursement,” recalls the MSSS. This evaluation process can take up to six months. However, INESSS has already carried out consultations with patients, caregivers, associations and health professionals from the end of February to mid-April 2024, because the manufacturer had initially expressed its intention to file an application for evaluation at the end of March 2024, but ultimately postponed the filing of its submission, preferring to wait for Health Canada’s decision. “We are keeping all information provided by stakeholders for evaluation purposes,” INESSS specified.

“With a view to a positive recommendation from INESSS, a negotiation of the price of the drug must follow by the MSSS with the manufacturer. It is therefore too early for the moment to decide on the possibility of reimbursing lecanemab,” responded the Duty the MSSS. For its part, Health Canada did not want to specify when it would make its decision: “Health Canada does not comment on the status of a drug under review. The time frame for completing the review depends on many factors, including, but not limited to, the need for additional data, discussions with the manufacturer, and requirements for updated safety information. A decision will be made once all required information has been carefully evaluated by Health Canada. »

All the doctors interviewed are in favor of government reimbursement, but all expect restrictions and very strict eligibility and exclusion criteria, including those stated above, and probably others, such as “doing the proof that the patient continues to benefit from the treatment after six months. There really needs to be a clinical impact associated with the removal of amyloid. However, this impact can vary from one patient to another,” underlines Dr.r Massoud.

“At the moment, the manufacturer is promoting 18 months of treatment. But if the majority of beta-amyloid disappears within 6 to 8 months, is there really any point in continuing treatment for longer? The amyloid deposits probably took 20 to 30 years to build up in the brain, so once we remove them, it will take another 30 years before it becomes a problem again. So, there might not really be any justification for prolonging the treatment,” says Dr.r Judes Poirier, deputy director of the Center for Studies on the Prevention of Alzheimer’s Disease at the Douglas Research Center.

“What is very important is what will happen after 18 months of treatment,” underlines Dr.r Some charm. If what we will see in the follow-up studies presents itself as a strictly one-time effect, that is to say that the treatment slows the progression by 30% because we have removed the amyloid, but that afterwards, the patients join the curve [de progression habituelle de la maladie], we will say to ourselves that it is not worth giving this treatment given its complexity. But if we see that the two curves continue to separate, and that at 30 months, it slows down by 50%, that completely changes the situation because, in this case, we will postpone accommodation in institutions,” he says. to be worth.

“It will only be necessary to be reimbursed for patients who will benefit the most and run the least risk,” summarizes the DD Thibodeau.

One thing is certain, the Viau family is ready to assume the costs of the treatment at all costs. “We will try to get reimbursed by our personal insurance and we can always deduct a little from our taxes. As soon as it becomes available, let’s go ! » said Mme Viau.

“I want to see my grandchildren grow up!” » says Normand Viau.

How does lecanemab work?

To watch on video


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