Older Adults, Anti-Amyloid Therapy, and Frailty: What Oncology Can Teach Us

Eur J Neurol. 2026 Apr;33(4):e70567. doi: 10.1111/ene.70567.

Abstract

Background: Anti-amyloid therapies, such as lecanemab or donanemab, represent the first disease-modifying treatments approved for early Alzheimer's disease (AD) in individuals with confirmed amyloid pathology. Their implementation in routine care raises important challenges, particularly in older adults with heterogeneous functional reserve and multimorbidity. We address the role of frailty in refining clinical decision-making for anti-amyloid therapies.

Methods: This short communication presents a conceptual discussion informed by geriatric oncology, where frailty assessment and comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) are routinely used to individualize treatment in heterogeneous older populations. We describe how similar principles may be applied to anti-amyloid monoclonal antibodies once regulatory eligibility has been established, and outline a frailty-informed conceptual framework to support clinical decision-making in routine care.

Results: This conceptual analysis proposes a stepwise, frailty-informed clinical framework that integrates regulatory eligibility assessment with brief frailty screening and targeted comprehensive geriatric assessment. The framework defines differentiated clinical pathways for robust, pre-frail, and frail individuals, linking frailty status to specific decisions regarding treatment initiation, need for prehabilitation, intensity of monitoring, and consideration of treatment deferral. By embedding frailty assessment within routine clinical workflows, the framework operationalizes evaluation of physiological reserve, anticipates treatment burden and monitoring feasibility, and provides a structured approach to individualized risk-benefit appraisal for anti-amyloid therapies.

Conclusions: Frailty-informed frameworks may offer a pragmatic and ethically grounded approach to support real-world implementation of anti-amyloid therapies, guiding treatment selection as well as longitudinal decisions on monitoring, continuation, and reassessment over time.

Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; anti‐amyloid therapies; comprehensive geriatric assessment; frailty; lecanemab.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Alzheimer Disease* / drug therapy
  • Clinical Decision-Making
  • Frail Elderly
  • Frailty* / diagnosis
  • Geriatric Assessment* / methods
  • Humans
  • Medical Oncology* / methods