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Safety and efficacy of pioglitazone for the delay of cognitive impairment in people at risk of Alzheimer's disease (TOMMORROW): a prognostic biomarker study and a phase 3, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Authors :
Carl Chiang
Jacquelynn Copeland
Vanessa Raymont
Peter Connelly
Reto Kressig
Guy G. Potter
Daniel K. Burns
Stephen Pearson
Manish Saxena
Ann M. Saunders
Debra Fleischman
DeRen Huang
Thomas Leyhe
Gabriel Leger
Gigi Lefebvre
Mardik Donikyan
Natalie Denburg
Alex Knopman
Nancy Voight
James Burke
Philip Moore
James R. Burke
Margaret Newson
Stephen Haneline
Adam J. Schwarz
George Demakis
Joseph Butchart
Robert Mitchell
Mark Leibowitz
Michael Woodward
Robert Alexander
Concetta Forchetti
Emiliangelo Ratti
Andreas U. Monsch
Lon S. Schneider
Aaron Ritter
Joscelyn Agron-Figueroa
Fraser Inglis
Craig Curtis
Judith Neugroschl
Geraint Price
Mark Brody
Clark Johnson
Clive Ballard
Stephen Thein
Meredith Culp
Kristine Yaffe
Ahad Sabet
Walter Braude
Gregory Kirk
David Krefetz
Rupert Noad
Omid Omidvar
John Sass
Brenda L. Plassman
James Bergthold
Arne Klostermann
Haydn Till
Aaron Ellenbogen
Patrick Harrigan
Heinz-Peter Herbst
Joseph Kass
Lorna Wallace
Jennifer Robinson
Elliot Henderson
Felicia Goldstein
Christopher McWilliam
R. Clarnette
Jerry Halsten
Dan Rujescu
Silvana Micallef
Nestor Galvez-Jimenez
Jeffrey Ross
Dag Aarsland
Hugh Miller
Theresa Campbell
Jingtao Wu
Allan Levey
Liebhild Stratmann
Rosalyn Lai
Agnes Flöel
Richard Shingleton
Steve Higham
Pierre N. Tariot
Esteban Olivera
Sandra Carusa
Amanda Olley
Ricky Mofsen
Kathryn Goozee
Kara Lyons
Richard J. Brown
Marwan N. Sabbagh
Virginia De Sanctis
Jerome Goldstein
Hamid R. Sohrabi
Lefkos T. Middleton
Eugen Schlegel
Donna Munic-Miller
Sylvia Robinson
David Watson
Oda Ackermann
Ralph Votolato
Peter Bailey
Paul Massman
Daniel Gruener
Robert Perneczky
Frederick Schaerf
Craig W. Ritchie
Scott Losk
Christina Zimmerman
Mario Parra
Jill Crusey
Edward Zamrini
Christine Belden
Thomas Arnold
Alexander White
Linda Rice
Elizabeth Coulthard
Jane Martin
Anne Koplin
Rebecca Evans
Janet O'Neil
Oliver Peters
Raj Shah
Marshall Nash
Ronald Bradley
Kathleen A. Welsh-Bohmer
Howard Hassman
Scott Barton
Robert Cohen
Robert Stephenson
Jacobo Mintzer
Michael W. Lutz
Wendy Bond
Rachelle S. Doody
Ronald Hofner
Laura Samson
Source :
The Lancet Neurology. 20:537-547
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Background: The identification of people at risk of cognitive impairment is essential for improving recruitment in secondary prevention trials of Alzheimer's disease. We aimed to test and qualify a biomarker risk assignment algorithm (BRAA) to identify participants at risk of developing mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer's disease within 5 years, and to evaluate the safety and efficacy of low-dose pioglitazone to delay onset of mild cognitive impairment in these at-risk participants. Methods: In this phase 3, multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study, we enrolled cognitively healthy, community living participants aged 65–83 years from 57 academic affiliated and private research clinics in Australia, Germany, Switzerland, the UK, and the USA. By use of the BRAA, participants were grouped as high risk or low risk. Participants at high risk were randomly assigned 1:1 to receive oral pioglitazone (0·8 mg/day sustained release) or placebo, and all low-risk participants received placebo. Study investigators, site staff, sponsor personnel, and study participants were masked to genotype, risk assignment, and treatment assignment. The planned study duration was the time to accumulate 202 events of mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer's disease in White participants who were at high risk (the population on whom the genetic analyses that informed the BRAA development was done). Primary endpoints were time-to-event comparisons between participants at high risk and low risk given placebo (for the BRAA objective), and between participants at high risk given pioglitazone or placebo (for the efficacy objective). The primary analysis included all participants who were randomly assigned, received at least one dose of study drug, and had at least one valid post-baseline visit, with significance set at p=0·01. The safety analysis included all participants who were randomly assigned and received at least one dose of study medication. An efficacy futility analysis was planned for when approximately 33% of the anticipated events occurred in the high-risk, White, non-Hispanic or Latino group. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01931566. Findings: Between Aug 28, 2013, and Dec 21, 2015, we enrolled 3494 participants (3061 at high risk and 433 at low risk). Of those participants, 1545 were randomly assigned to pioglitazone and 1516 to placebo. 1104 participants discontinued treatment (464 assigned to the pioglitazone group, 501 in the placebo high risk group, and 139 in the placebo low risk group). 3399 participants had at least one dose of study drug or placebo and at least one post-baseline follow-up visit, and were included in the efficacy analysis. 3465 participants were included in the safety analysis (1531 assigned to the pioglitazone group, 1507 in the placebo high risk group, and 427 in the placebo low risk group). In the full analysis set, 46 (3·3%) of 1406 participants at high risk given placebo had mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer's disease, versus four (1·0%) of 402 participants at low risk given placebo (hazard ratio 3·26, 99% CI 0·85–12·45; p=0·023). 39 (2·7%) of 1430 participants at high risk given pioglitazone had mild cognitive impairment, versus 46 (3·3%) of 1406 participants at high risk given placebo (hazard ratio 0·80, 99% CI 0·45–1·40; p=0·307). In the safety analysis set, seven (0·5%) of 1531 participants at high risk given pioglitazone died versus 21 (1·4%) of 1507 participants at high risk given placebo. There were no other notable differences in adverse events between groups. The study was terminated in January, 2018, after failing to meet the non-futility threshold. Interpretation: Pioglitazone did not delay the onset of mild cognitive impairment. The biomarker algorithm demonstrated a 3 times enrichment of events in the high risk placebo group compared with the low risk placebo group, but did not reach the pre-specified significance threshold. Because we did not complete the study as planned, findings can only be considered exploratory. The conduct of this study could prove useful to future clinical development strategies for Alzheimer's disease prevention studies. Funding: Takeda and Zinfandel.

Details

ISSN :
14744422
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....257db405d4f97f3e8da4448459b3c956