Dr. Jeffrey L. Cummings In The News

Drug Discovery World
A new immunotherapy candidate has demonstrated a trend for slowing cognitive decline in mild Alzheimer’s disease (AD), potentially offering a more accessible and cost-effective alternative to other immunotherapies.
Alzforum
With three positive and three negative Phase 3 trials of second-generation anti-amyloid antibodies to draw upon, Alzheimerologists now have more data to mine for what works and what does not. At last month’s Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in Amsterdam, scientists pored over gantenerumab and lecanemab data, hunting for clues of which parameters might predict success. And clues they found.
Alzheimer's News Today
93% of patients in study had an antibody response against beta-amyloid
MedPage Today
Patients starting SSRIs and lecanemab may warrant close monitoring
Yahoo!
UB-311 could offer multiple competitive advantages over licensed passive immunotherapies, including less frequent dosing, a more convenient mode of administration, improved accessibility and cost-effectiveness, and potentially lower rates of ARIA-E
ScienceNews
The drugs clear sticky plaques from the brain. But they are not for everyone, experts caution
Precision Medicine
Newly approved anti-amyloid therapies have spurred hope for patients and caregivers affected by Alzheimer's disease, but access to these drugs could be stymied by a lack of convenient and available beta-amyloid testing options.
Clinical Research News
The latest report on clinical trials in the Alzheimer’s drug development pipeline points to the growing potential of anti-amyloid monoclonal antibodies for treating the brain-robbing condition. Anti-inflammatory agents comprise the single largest therapeutic category with 25 drugs, but astoundingly no two are aimed at the same target, according to lead author Jeffrey Cummings, M.D., research professor in the school of integrated health sciences at the Ê×Ò³| Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­, and director of its Chambers-Grundy Center for Transformative Neuroscience.