Drug licence refused

A decision by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) to refuse a licence for the dementia drug aducanumab has been described as “bitterly disappointing news for people with Alzheimer’s disease.”

Alzheimer’s Research UK chief executive Hilary Evans made the comment after the EMA rejected an application by the manufacturer Biogen to distribute the drug across the European Union.  It is not known whether Biogen will make a similar application to the UK regulator, the MHRA, to license the drug here.

The EMA turned down the application despite the fact that aducanumab – known commercially as Aduhelm – has been approved for use in the USA for people with mild cognitive impairment or mild Alzheimer’s disease.

In its ruling the agency agreed that the drug does reduce Alzheimer’s trademark amyloid protein in the brain but said that the link between this and clinical effect was unproven. Nor did the studies show the drug was sufficiently safe since there was evidence in some cases of brain swelling or bleeding.

Evans added: “Biogen must continue collecting essential data to clarify the safety and effectiveness of aducanumab.  While further data collection is happening in the US, the UK is uniquely well placed to deliver world-class clinical studies that could address unanswered questions about the drug.”

Similar Posts

  • Major Conditions Strategy

    There have been mixed reactions across health and care to the government’s decision to scrap plans for individual conditions like dementia and replace them with a combined Major Conditions Strategy (see JDC Newsletter, 2 February). Last year the government promised 10-year plans for various individual conditions, including dementia, cancer and mental health, but in January…

  • New SCIE website

    The Social Care Institute for Excellence (SCIE) have launched a new website.   SCIE’s work centres around co-producing, sharing, and supporting the use of the best available knowledge and evidence about what works in social care and social work.  You can visit the new website here: https://www.scie.org.uk/. An abridged SCIE dementia resource can be found here:…

  • Dementia-friendly award

    A Chelmsford hospital run by eye surgery specialists SpaMedica has won a “Working to Become Dementia Friendly” award from Alzheimer’s Society. The hospital has worked closely with the Society and the award follows implementation of SpaMedica’s dementia action plan across all 46 of its UK hospitals.  Measures include dedicated noticeboards, posters and booklets for patients…

  • Revised landscape design factsheet

    Landscaped gardens can be created in line with the latest research on sensory and cognitive impairment, a newly revised factsheet suggests.  “Landscape Design Principles for Dementia Care (2nd edition)” is an updated Housing LIN Factsheet (no 35), which shows how well-designed gardens can enhance residents’ quality of life in housing with care developments.  It highlights…

  • Living memories

    More than 2500 archive film programmes, clips and newsreels showing aspects of life in the 20th century can be found via Living Memories Online, a social enterprise promoting the use of archive film to trigger memories and start conversations between the generations. Developed by Brian Norris and his wife Leonore, it is the result of…

  • Care home visiting

    Government guidance on care home visiting in England was updated on 24 February, confirming that there are no nationally set direct restrictions on visiting in care homes.  The Department of Health and Social Care says it expects care providers to facilitate visits wherever possible and in a risk-managed way.  The revised guidance covers visits that…