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About
The primary objective of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of AGB101 on slowing cognitive and functional impairment as measured by reduction in neuronal injury in participants with mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer's Disease. Participants will be randomized to receive placebo or AGB101 (220 mg), once daily for 78 weeks. Secondary objectives are to assess the effect of AGB101 compared with placebo on clinical progression as measured by the Clinical Dementia Rating Scale- Sum of Boxes and Memory Box score.
Full description
AGB101 is hypothesized to slow the progression of MCI due to AD by restoring the entorhinal/hippocampal network balance. During this phase of the disease, fMRI studies show hippocampal over-activity and EC under-activity. As shown in the phase 2 study, AGB101 restores this network balance by attenuating hippocampal over-activity and restoring EC activity. Hippocampal over-activity predicts progression on EC atrophy (primary endpoint) and on CDR-SB (secondary endpoint). By restoring network balance, AGB101 is hypothesized to improve cognitive function (CDR-SB) and reduce neuronal injury (EC atrophy).
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Inclusion criteria
Subjects between 55 and 85 years old (inclusive) in good general health:
Have a study partner who has sufficient contact with the subject to be able to provide assessment of memory changes, who can accompany the subject to the screening visit and all major clinic visits for the duration of those visits, and who is able to provide an independent evaluation of the subject's functioning.
Have MCI as defined by all of the following criteria and consistent with the National Institute on Aging-Alzheimer's Association criteria:
Have an Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) genotype that does not include one or more E4 alleles.
Permitted medications:
Willing and able to undergo imaging procedures:
An amyloid-imaging PET scan with 11C-PiB or documented evidence of an amyloid-positive PET scan.
The amyloid PET scan performed at baseline must be read by a qualified physician with experience in reading amyloid PET scans, and it should be consistent with the presence of amyloid plaques.
Repeated MRI scans (3 Tesla) with no contraindications to MRI. The MRI scan performed at baseline must be read by a physician with experience in evaluating brain-imaging studies in dementia. MRI scan results are consistent with the diagnosis of amnestic MCI due to AD with no clinically significant findings of non-AD pathology that could account for the observed cognitive impairment.
Willing to allow collection of blood for apolipoprotein E (ApoE) genotyping and banking.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
0 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Carrie Wagandt
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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