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Senolytic Therapy to Modulate the Progression of Alzheimer's Disease (SToMP-AD): A Pilot Clinical Trial
Mitzi M. Gonzales, Valentina R. Garbarino, Eduardo Zilli, Ronald C. Petersen, James L. Kirkland, Tamar Tchkonia, Nicolas Musi, Sudha Seshadri, Suzanne Craft, Miranda E. Orr
The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer s Disease · 2021 · ▲ 186 citations
Cellular senescence
Chronic inflammation
Senolytics
Human
Mouse
Randomized controlled trial
Preclinical / animal
Abstract
Preclinical studies indicate an age-associated accumulation of senescent cells across multiple organ systems. Emerging evidence suggests that tau protein accumulation, which closely correlates with cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease and other tauopathies, drives cellular senescence(definition) in the brain. Pharmacologically clearing senescent cells in mouse models of tauopathy reduced brain pathogenesis. Compared to vehicle treated mice, intermittent senolytic administration reduced tau accumulation and neuroinflammation, preserved neuronal and synaptic density, restored aberrant cerebral blood flow, and reduced ventricular enlargement. Intermittent dosing of the senolytics(definition), dasatinib plus quercetin, has shown an acceptable safety profile in clinical studies for other senescence-associated conditions. With these data, we proposed and herein describe the objectives and methods for a clinical vanguard study. This initial open-label clinical trial pilots an intermittent senolytic combination therapy of dasatinib plus quercetin in five older adults with early-stage Alzheimer's disease. The primary objective is to evaluate the central nervous system penetration of dasatinib and quercetin through analysis of cerebrospinal fluid collected at baseline and after 12 weeks of treatment. Further, through a series of secondary outcome measures to assess target engagement of the senolytic compounds and Alzheimer's disease-relevant cognitive, functional, and physical outcomes, we will collect preliminary data on safety, feasibility, and efficacy. The results of this study will be used to inform the development of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled multicenter phase II trial to further explore of the safety, feasibility, and efficacy of senolytics for modulating the progression of Alzheimer's disease. Clinicaltrials.gov registration number and date: NCT04063124 (08/21/2019).
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- DOI
- 10.14283/jpad.2021.62
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- 2026-06-15 MST
Cite this
APA
Gonzales, M.M., Garbarino, V.R., Zilli, E., Petersen, R.C., Kirkland, J.L., Tchkonia, T., Musi, N., Seshadri, S., Craft, S., & Orr, M.E. (2021). Senolytic Therapy to Modulate the Progression of Alzheimer's Disease (SToMP-AD): A Pilot Clinical Trial. <em>The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer s Disease</em>. https://doi.org/10.14283/jpad.2021.62
Vancouver
Gonzales MM, Garbarino VR, Zilli E, Petersen RC, Kirkland JL, Tchkonia T, et al. Senolytic Therapy to Modulate the Progression of Alzheimer's Disease (SToMP-AD): A Pilot Clinical Trial. The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer s Disease. 2021. doi:10.14283/jpad.2021.62.
BibTeX
@article{mitzi2021Senoly,
title = {Senolytic Therapy to Modulate the Progression of Alzheimer's Disease (SToMP-AD): A Pilot Clinical Trial},
author = {Mitzi M. Gonzales and Valentina R. Garbarino and Eduardo Zilli and Ronald C. Petersen and James L. Kirkland and Tamar Tchkonia and Nicolas Musi and Sudha Seshadri and Suzanne Craft and Miranda E. Orr},
journal = {The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer s Disease},
year = {2021},
doi = {10.14283/jpad.2021.62},
}
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