The BBC reports that approval for the use of a new Alzheimer's drug, aducanumab, is to be sought, after work on it was abandoned in March owing to disappointing trials:
"The announcement is somewhat surprising because the company had discontinued work on the drug in March 2019, after disappointing trial results.
But the company says a new analysis of a larger dataset of the same studies shows that higher doses of aducanumab can provide a significant benefit to patients with early Alzheimer's, slowing their clinical decline so they preserve more of their memory and every day living skills - things that the disease usually robs."
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-50137041
I hope they are right, but I'm surprised that they are making these claims on the basis of what's apparently a post hoc analysis of the data six months after the initial analysis proved "disappointing." Isn't that the kind of thing people aren't meant to do in science these days?
"The announcement is somewhat surprising because the company had discontinued work on the drug in March 2019, after disappointing trial results.
But the company says a new analysis of a larger dataset of the same studies shows that higher doses of aducanumab can provide a significant benefit to patients with early Alzheimer's, slowing their clinical decline so they preserve more of their memory and every day living skills - things that the disease usually robs."
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-50137041
I hope they are right, but I'm surprised that they are making these claims on the basis of what's apparently a post hoc analysis of the data six months after the initial analysis proved "disappointing." Isn't that the kind of thing people aren't meant to do in science these days?