STAT+: Pharmalittle: We’re reading about a Biogen Alzheimer’s drug, skyrocketing 340B drug sales, and more

URL has been copied successfully!

Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the middle of the week. Congratulations on making it this far, and remember there are only a few more days until the weekend arrives. So keep plugging away. After all, what are the alternatives? While you ponder the possibilities, we invite you to join us for a needed cup of stimulation. Our choice today is ginseng honey, a favorite from our pantry. Meanwhile, here is the latest menu of tidbits to help you on your way. We hope you conquer the world and have a wonderful day. And as always, please do stay in touch. …

An experimental Alzheimer’s drug from Biogen, designed with a novel approach, slowed cognitive decline in a mid-stage trial at roughly comparable rates as approved medicines, new data that bolstered the company’s case to move the treatment into a Phase 3 trial, STAT says. Although experts will wait to see the pivotal trial data before making their final assessments of the drug, called diranersen, the results from the Phase 2 trial, if backed up in the larger study, could rekindle the debate about how strong trial results have to be to signify that a drug can offer meaningful benefits for patients and caregivers. 

Potential signs of frailty in older adults taking Eli Lilly’s GLP-1 obesity drug Zepbound ​may signal relatively high risks for adverse outcomes, Reuters writes, citing a large study that underscores concerns about how best to monitor seniors as U.S. Medicare expands access to obesity therapies. In general, frailty-associated conditions such as malnutrition, dehydration and loss of muscle mass and strength developed only rarely and the results should not discourage appropriate use of Zepbound or Novo Nordisk’s GLP-1 drug Wegovy in older adults, the researchers said. Instead, they encouraged closer follow-up of older patients taking the medicines.

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

Please follow us:
Follow by Email
X (Twitter)
Whatsapp
LinkedIn
Copy link

This post was originally published here