Lecanemab received FDA approval in January after a phase 3 trial showed it slows cognitive decline in early-stage Alzheimer's ...
The US Food and Drug Administration on Thursday granted traditional full approval to the Alzheimer’s drug Leqembi, the first medicine proven to slow the course of the memory-robbing disease.
The process of converting a drug to full FDA approval usually attracts little attention. But Alzheimer’s patients and advocates have been lobbying the federal government for months after ...
Approved by the FDA earlier this year, the Alzheimer's therapy lecanemab is an antibody that reduces the buildup in the brain of a sticky peptide called amyloid-beta (Aβ), which is thought to be ...
The FDA has recently approved exciting new treatments that can slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease, a scourge that claims more American lives than breast cancer and prostate cancer combined.
The Food and Drug Administration is now regularly approving new drugs after just one or two clinical trials — a significant departure from the more rigorous vetting process the agency was ...
The FDA approved two treatments to slow Alzheimer's. World Alzheimer's Day is Thursday, a global effort to raise awareness of ...
A potential new Alzheimer’s drug represses the harmful inflammatory response of the brain’s immune cells, reducing disease pathology, preserving neurons, and improving cognition in preclinical tests.
We’ll send you a myFT Daily Digest email rounding up the latest Vivek Ramaswamy news every morning. US biotech company Roivant Sciences has moved to distance itself from its founder, Vivek ...
For decades, attempts to treat or slow Alzheimer's disease (AD) — a brain disorder that causes dementia through damage to brain cells and other changes in the brain — have been dispiriting ...
Another diabetes drug maker is taking legal action against businesses in several states, alleging that they're "fraudulently ...
The US Food and Drug Administration on Thursday granted traditional full approval to the Alzheimer’s drug Leqembi, the first medicine proven to slow the course of the memory-robbing disease.