Effects of LY2062430 in Subjects With Mild-to-Moderate Alzheimer's Disease and in Healthy Volunteers...
Alzheimer's DiseaseTo study the safety of LY2062430 in patients with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's disease and in healthy volunteers.
Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Study of Oral Dimebon in Subjects With Mild to Moderate Alzheimer's...
Alzheimer's DiseaseThis study will evaluate the safety and potential benefit of Dimebon as compared to placebo in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's Disease.
Rosiglitazone (Extended Release Tablets) As Adjunctive Therapy For Subjects With Mild To Moderate...
Alzheimer's DiseaseRosiglitazone (RSG) has been tested in clinical studies and is approved by the FDA as a treatment for type II diabetes mellitus, a disease that occurs when the body is unable to effectively use glucose. RSG XR, the investigational drug used in this study, is an extended-release form of RSG. This study tests whether RSG XR safely provides clinical benefit to people with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease (AD) when combined with the currently approved AD medication, Aricept (donepezil). RSG XR is a new approach to AD therapy and this study tests a new way to treat AD by testing whether one's genetic makeup affects their response to the study drug. Clinical data suggesting that RSG may benefit AD patients was first seen in a small study performed at the University of Washington and then from a larger GSK study conducted in Europe and New Zealand. In the first study, subjects receiving RSG once daily for 6 months scored significantly better on 3 tests of memory and thought than those who did not receive RSG. In the GSK study, those that appeared to benefit most from treatment with RSG XR had a specific genetic pattern. They did not have the gene that caused them to produce the protein apolipoprotein E e4 (APOE e4). Subjects who have the APOE e4 gene may have two copies, one from each parent, or they may have only one APOE e4 gene meaning that they inherited either the APOE e2 or APOE e3 version of the gene, instead of APOE e4, from one of their parents. Subjects with one copy of the APOE e4 gene remained at their same level of thinking ability while those with two copies of the APOE e4 gene, continued to worsen during the 6-month treatment. The current study will more directly test the effectiveness or RSG XR on people who either have or lack the APOE e4 gene.
Study Evaluating the Safety of Lecozotan SR in Healthy Young and Elderly Subjects
Alzheimer DiseaseTo assess the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of single and multiple ascending oral doses of lecozotan SR in healthy young and elderly subjects.
Effect of PF-04360365 On ABETA In Patients With Alzheimer's Disease And Healthy Volunteers
Alzheimer's DiseaseThe primary goal of this study is to evaluate the effect of PF-04360365 on the clearance of ABETA from the CSF (cerebrospinal fluid) in patients with mild Alzheimer's disease and healthy volunteers. Additionally, the study will assess the pharmacokinetics of PF-04360365, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic relationships in plasma and CSF and the safety and tolerability of single doses of PF-04360365 administered to patients with Alzheimer's disease and healthy volunteers.
A Study Of PF-04447943 Compared To Placebo In Subjects With Mild To Moderate Alzheimer's Disease...
Alzheimer's DiseaseThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects of PF-04447943 compared to placebo on cognitive, behavioral and overall symptoms of Alzheimer's disease; evaluate the safety and tolerability of PF-0444793 compared to placebo; and determine the levels of PF-04447943 in the plasma over the course of the study.
Safety Study of a Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 (GSK3) Inhibitor in Patients With Alzheimer´s Disease...
Alzheimer´s DiseaseThe purpose of this study is to evaluate if 4 escalating doses during 20 weeks of NP031112 are safe and tolerated in patients with Alzheimer´s disease.
Endothelial Facilitation in Alzheimer's Disease
Alzheimer's DiseasePurpose of the study: Patients with mild Alzheimer's Disease will be given three different drugs over a 4-month period to try to increase the blood flow to their brains, and improve blood vessel and brain function. Each drug can help to open the blood vessels in the brain, and together they may be more effective than each drug alone. The hypothesis is that small blood vessels secrete substances that maintain the integrity of the brain, and may prevent loss of nerve cells leading to Alzheimer's Disease
Coordinating Center for Enhancing ADRD Caregiving
DementiaAlzheimer DiseaseEstablished in 1995, Resources for Enhancing Alzheimer's Caregiver Health (REACH) is a unique, multi-site research program sponsored by the National Institute on Aging (NIA) and the National Institute on Nursing Research (NINR). The primary purpose of REACH is to carry out social and behavioral research on interventions designed to enhance family caregiving for Alzheimer's disease and related disorders. Specifically, REACH has two goals: to test the effectiveness of multiple different interventions and to evaluate the pooled effect of REACH interventions overall. REACH grew out of a National Institute of Health (NIH) initiative that acknowledged the well-documented burdens associated with family caregiving as well as the existence of promising family caregiver interventions reported in the literature.
Alzheimer's Disease: Potential Benefit of Isoflavones
Alzheimer's DiseaseThe purpose of this pilot study is to evaluate the potential effects of soy isoflavone supplements on cognitive function for men and women with Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Preliminary studies evaluating the effects of soy supplements on memory in cognitively healthy older adults have yielded promising results that are now being evaluated in patients with AD. It is hypothesized that isoflavone supplements will ameliorate cognitive declines for older adults diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, when compared to subjects on placebo.