Researchers have found a drug that can help the brain grow new cells
and said their study may lead to ways to improve experimental
Alzheimer’s drugs.
The researchers’ work, done on rodents, builds on findings that all
mammals, including humans, make brain cells throughout their lives. Most
of these die, but this drug helps more of the baby cells survive and
grow to become functioning brain cells.
“We make new neurons every day in our brain,” Andrew Pieper of the
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas who worked on
the study, said in a telephone interview. “What our compound does is
allow more of them to survive.”
The compound is called P7C3 for now, and the researchers have already
started tweaking it to make it more effective. They said it seems safe
and appears to work even when taken as a pill.
The compound is similar to Medivation Inc and Pfizer Inc’s experimental
Alzheimer’s drug, Dimebon, and may provide ways to improve its effects,
Pieper and colleagues reported in the journal Cell.
It is also similar to some compounds owned by Serono, the researchers
said.
Dimebon, originally a Russian-made antihistamine also known as
latrepirdine, failed in a clinical trial for Alzheimer’s disease in
March.
“For the sake of patients suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, it is
hoped that the apparently marginal clinical utility of Dimebon might be
enhanced by improvements in both its potency and ceiling of
proneurogenic, neuroprotective efficacy,” the researchers wrote.
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