Hope For An Alzheimer's Breakthrough Remains Despite Pfizer Inc.'s Dimebon's Failure

Datamonitor -- A Phase III trial evaluating Medivation/Pfizer's Dimebon in Alzheimer's disease has failed to meet any of its clinical endpoints, despite high hopes of the drug after promising Phase II results. This is a significant setback for Dimebon's developers, particularly Medivation, but hope for the millions of Alzheimer's sufferers and their caregivers remains in the pipeline.

CONNECTION fails to validate positive Phase II results

On March 3, Medivation announced that its big hope for Alzheimer's disease, Dimebon (latrepirdine; Medivation/Pfizer), failed to achieve clinical benefit over placebo in one of its pivotal Phase III trials. In the trial, dubbed the CONNECTION study by the company, investigators were unable to demonstrate that Dimebon significantly slowed the progression of the disease based on any of the five commonly used endpoints. Speaking in a press conference, Medivation's CEO David Hung stated: "The outcome of the trial was unexpected, and is obviously a major disappointment, especially for Alzheimer's patients and their caregivers."

The result certainly comes as a surprise to those tracking the progress of the drug. The CONNECTION data stand in stark contrast with positive Phase II results released in 2006, which served to greatly raise expectations of what was purported to be a future blockbuster for Alzheimer's disease. Indeed, on the strength of these data, Datamonitor had previously forecast Dimebon to achieve annual sales of around $5 billion in the seven major markets by 2018, placing it as one of the biggest-selling drugs at this time.

Early analysis of the CONNECTION data suggests that the placebo response was greater than that previously seen and that Dimebon showed 'a materially weaker response'. The study results, drawn from 598 participants across the US, Europe and Latin America, contradict those from the preceding Phase II trial, which involved 183 patients in Russia. These Phase II data were so encouraging that they were published in the July 2008 issue of the Lancet.

However, even before the CONNECTION data were revealed, some experts interviewed by Datamonitor were skeptical of the outcome of the Russian trial. In its press announcement for the Phase III trial, Medivation conceded that the Russian results may have been limited by the small sample size, the involvement of just one geographical location and the use of only one language to communicate disease severity. Nevertheless, many more remained highly encouraged by the Phase II data and regarded Dimebon as one of the most promising candidates in late-stage development for Alzheimer's disease. Indeed, Pfizer's decision to in-license the drug at such a high cost is testimony to these high hopes.

Medivation will face a rough patch, though it is not yet over for Dimebon

Medivation has suffered as a result of Dimebon's failure, with its share price plummeting by 68% to $13.04 from an all-time high of $40.49 only the day before the announcement. With future milestone payments and royalties hanging in the balance and no products currently on the market, Medivation has undoubtedly suffered a major blow. However, although the CONNECTION results are certainly a setback, they do not necessarily spell the end for Dimebon. Datamonitor expects that the company will now pin its hopes on longer-term Alzheimer's trials already underway as well as Dimebon's secondary indication in Huntington's disease, for which it is currently in Phase III development.

Pfizer, which signed a collaboration deal with Medivation in September 2008 and has since co-developed the drug, stands to lose most or all of the return on its large investment. The company's initial upfront payment to Medivation was $225m, one of the largest of its type in recent years. Still, the CONNECTION setback is mediated somewhat by Pfizer's existing presence in the Alzheimer's marketplace, through its market-leading compound Aricept (donepezil) and the extensive portfolio of pipeline candidates which it inherited following the acquisition of Wyeth.

One positive to come out of the failure is that there will not be significant ramifications for other drugs in development for Alzheimer's disease. Within the current pipeline, Dimebon is unique in its mode of action. The drug is a small molecule mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP) blocker, as well as an NMDA receptor antagonist and cholinesterase inhibitor. Unlike Dimebon, the majority of the other pipeline candidates are targeted towards the hypothesized Alzheimer's disease etiology. Drug developers' focus has shifted from neurotransmitter replacements to biological agents that affect beta-amyloid and tau protein, both hallmarks of the disease. The next eagerly awaited compound for which Phase III results will be announced is likely to be bapineuzumab (Johnson & Johnson/Pfizer), a humanized monoclonal antibody for beta-amyloid. However, given the high attrition rate in the pipeline, expectations will be tempered.

As other markets stall, the high risk/high reward of Alzheimer's is tempting.

There remains an enormous unmet need in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease. For the millions of elderly people worldwide, there are just four drugs available to them that can only offer a modest symptomatic effect. Even so, these treatments cannot slow or modify the course of this neurodegenerative disease, which is the ultimate goal in Alzheimer's therapy. However, despite this need, drug developers have struggled to get new agents to market and the pipeline over the past 10 years is littered with late-stage failures. Indeed, excluding reformulations, no new drugs have launched for Alzheimer's disease since Namenda (memantine; Forest/Merz/Lundbeck) arrived in 2002. Since then, around 20 products have failed Phase III trials.

With this in mind, then, the news about Dimebon may not be such a surprise after all. It is, of course, a big disappointment to those in the Alzheimer's community, but the future looks bright. As other core therapy markets become less profitable, both major pharmaceutical and biotech firms are increasingly looking to the huge potential of the untapped Alzheimer's disease market. Investment into Alzheimer's drug R&D continues to grow exponentially and, ultimately, this is the best news for sufferers: it is only a matter of time before an effective therapy arrives.

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