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DavidSJ 2 hours ago

The hypothesis that amyloid is simply a downstream effect, not a cause, is of course worth considering, and where my mind was at when I first approached the literature skeptically. The widespread presence of amyloid-beta plaques in Alzheimer's disease has been known since 1906, but the field didn't adopt the amyloid hypothesis for decades precisely because of this possibility. But then in the early 1990's, strong genetic causal evidence emerged, which is why the amyloid hypothesis emerged at that time. Other important causal evidence has emerged since, especially that tau pathology (the proximate cause of neurodegeneration) is causally downstream of amyloid pathology, which we know from many lines of evidence now. (See the article for a lot more detail on all this, if you are curious.)

As for the possibility that the successes of amyloid therapies might be explicable by chance, this is highly implausible. Only three (aducanumab, lecanemab, and donanemab) of a dozen or more amyloid therapies successfully cleared plaque, and it is precisely those three that achieved a slowdown of cognitive decline in phase 3 trials (with aducanumab succeeding in only one of its two, but with the others succeeding in their only phase 3), several of which with p-values below 0.001. This is not p-hacking or reporting bias.

stinkbeetle 6 minutes ago | parent [-]

Would you expect progression to cease if not reverse if the cause was cleared?