Anti-amyloid Alzheimer's drugs show no clinically meaningful effect
medicalxpress - Drugs that target amyloid beta proteins in the brain likely have no clinically meaningful positive effects, while increasing the risk of bleeding and swelling in the brain, a new review in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews has found.
AI Summary: A major review concludes anti-amyloid Alzheimer’s medications show no clinically meaningful effect on patients’ cognition or daily function, prompting renewed debate about drug approvals, prescribing and research priorities. The analysis calls for careful reassessment of treatment value, clearer communication to patients and tighter scrutiny of future trials.
- Anti-amyloid drugs fall short: little benefit, safety risks (5)
- New biomarkers and imaging reshape Alzheimer’s diagnosis timing (3)
- Social and care issues: loneliness, memory and treatment decisions (2)
- All Other Stories
Anti-amyloid drugs fall short: little benefit, safety risks
New biomarkers and imaging reshape Alzheimer’s diagnosis timing
Social and care issues: loneliness, memory and treatment decisions
All Other Stories
New Bill Seeks to Lower Out-of-Pocket Drug Costs
Marissa Plescia / medcitynews - Rep. Greg Murphy introduced a bill that would require out-of-pocket prescription drug spending to count toward patients’ deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums regardless of where the drugs are purchased.The post New Bill Seeks to Lower Out-of-Pocket Drug…
AI Summary: Lawmakers introduced legislation to reduce out‑of‑pocket drug costs by allowing patients' direct drug purchases to count toward their insurance deductibles. The proposal aims to ease financial strain for people buying costly medications out‑of‑pocket, but would require insurers and pharmacy systems to change longstanding accounting and benefits practices.