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Defining Benefit: Clinically and Biologically Meaningful Outcomes in the Next-generation Alzheimer's Disease Clinical Care Pathway

Overview
Specialties Neurology
Psychiatry
Date 2024 Dec 19
PMID 39697158
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Abstract

To understand the potential benefits of emerging Alzheimer's disease (AD) therapies within and beyond clinical trial settings, there is a need to advance current outcome measurements into meaningful information relevant to all stakeholders. The relationship between the impact on disease biology and clinically measurable outcomes in cognition, function, and behavior must be considered when defining the meaningful benefit of early AD therapies. In this review, we discuss: (1) the lack of consideration for biomarkers in the current concept of meaningfulness in AD; (2) the lack of gold standards for determining minimal biologically and clinically important differences (MBCIDs) in AD trials; (3) how the treatment benefits of disease-modifying treatments are cumulative and increase over time; and (4) the different concepts of meaningfulness among key stakeholders. This review utilizes the future clinical biological framework of AD and aims to further integrate and expand the parameters of meaningful benefits toward a precision medicine framework. HIGHLIGHTS: Definition of meaningful benefit from Alzheimer's disease (AD) treatment varies across disease stage and stakeholder perspectives. Observable and meaningful outcomes must consider the clinical-biological nature of AD. Statistically significant effects or outcomes do not always equate to clinically meaningfulness. Assessment tools must reflect stage-specific subtle changes following treatment. Real-world evidence will support consensus, definition, and interpretation of clinical meaningfulness.

Citing Articles

Defining benefit: Clinically and biologically meaningful outcomes in the next-generation Alzheimer's disease clinical care pathway.

Elhage A, Cohen S, Cummings J, van der Flier W, Aisen P, Cho M Alzheimers Dement. 2024; 21(2):e14425.

PMID: 39697158 PMC: 11848336. DOI: 10.1002/alz.14425.

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