The advent of Alzheimer treatments will change the trajectory of human aging

Nat Aging. 2024 Apr;4(4):453-463. doi: 10.1038/s43587-024-00611-5. Epub 2024 Apr 19.

Abstract

Slowing neurodegenerative disorders of late life has lagged behind progress on other chronic diseases. But advances in two areas, biochemical pathology and human genetics, have now identified early pathogenic events, enabling molecular hypotheses and disease-modifying treatments. A salient example is the discovery that antibodies to amyloid ß-protein, long debated as a causative factor in Alzheimer's disease (AD), clear amyloid plaques, decrease levels of abnormal tau proteins and slow cognitive decline. Approval of amyloid antibodies as the first disease-modifying treatments means a gradually rising fraction of the world's estimated 60 million people with symptomatic disease may decline less or even stabilize. Society is entering an era in which the unchecked devastation of AD is no longer inevitable. This Perspective considers the impact of slowing AD and other neurodegenerative disorders on the trajectory of aging, allowing people to survive into late life with less functional decline. The implications of this moment for medicine and society are profound.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Aging / metabolism
  • Alzheimer Disease* / drug therapy
  • Cognitive Dysfunction*
  • Humans
  • tau Proteins / metabolism

Substances

  • tau Proteins