Researcher analyzing brain MRI scans related to Alzheimer's drug lecanemab study, showing amyloid clearance but no glymphatic improvement.
Researcher analyzing brain MRI scans related to Alzheimer's drug lecanemab study, showing amyloid clearance but no glymphatic improvement.
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Study finds lecanemab clears amyloid but shows no short-term recovery in brain waste-clearance system

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Researchers at Osaka Metropolitan University report that while the Alzheimer’s drug lecanemab reduces amyloid plaques, MRI measures found no improvement in the brain’s glymphatic waste-clearance three months after treatment began, underscoring the disease’s complexity and the need for multi-target approaches.

A team led by graduate student Tatsushi Oura and Dr. Hiroyuki Tatekawa at Osaka Metropolitan University examined whether lecanemab’s plaque-clearing effect translates into early recovery of the brain’s waste-removal function. Using diffusion tensor imaging along the perivascular space (DTI-ALPS)—an MRI-derived index linked to glymphatic activity—the researchers scanned patients before starting lecanemab and again at three months. In this preliminary cohort (n=13), they found no significant change in the DTI-ALPS index between baseline and the three‑month follow‑up, indicating no short‑term recovery of the glymphatic system.

“The impairment of the glymphatic system may not recover within the short-term, even when Aβ is reduced by lecanemab,” Oura said. The findings were published online in the Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging in September 2025.

The glymphatic system helps clear metabolic waste, including amyloid‑β, from brain tissue. Although lecanemab is an FDA‑approved treatment for early Alzheimer’s disease that reduces amyloid plaques—and has been shown in a phase 3 trial to slow clinical decline—this study suggests that early neuronal injury and clearance deficits may already be established by symptom onset and are not quickly reversed by amyloid removal alone.

According to the university, future work will assess how factors such as patient age, disease stage, and the burden of white‑matter lesions relate to treatment response and may inform how best to administer therapy over longer time frames.

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Scientific illustration depicting healthy and damaged tanycytes in the brain's third ventricle clearing tau protein in Alzheimer’s disease.
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Study links tanycyte damage to reduced tau clearance in Alzheimer’s disease

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Researchers report that tanycytes—specialized cells lining the brain’s third ventricle—can help move tau protein from cerebrospinal fluid into the bloodstream, and that signs of tanycyte disruption in Alzheimer’s patient tissue may be associated with impaired tau removal. The findings, published March 5 in Cell Press Blue, are based on animal and cell experiments and analyses of human brain samples.

Brazil's National Health Surveillance Agency (Anvisa) approved the drug lecanemabe, marketed as Leqembi, on Thursday, January 8, for patients with early-stage Alzheimer's. The monoclonal antibody, administered via infusion, slows disease progression in individuals with mild cognitive impairment and confirmed beta-amyloid protein in the brain. The approval marks progress, though it is not a cure.

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Alzheimer's trials are shifting to a multi-target approach inspired by cancer research, even after failures with Novo Nordisk's semaglutide. Only two drugs, Eli Lilly's Kisunla and Eisai and Biogen's Leqembi, are widely approved to slow progression. This evolution treats the brain-wasting disease as a complex system, seeking new ways to halt it amid its global impact.

Researchers at UCLA Health and UC San Francisco have identified a natural defense mechanism in brain cells that helps remove toxic tau protein, potentially explaining why some neurons resist Alzheimer's damage better than others. The study, published in Cell, used CRISPR screening on lab-grown human neurons to uncover this system. Findings suggest new therapeutic avenues for neurodegenerative diseases.

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Researchers at Sweden’s Karolinska Institutet and Japan’s RIKEN Center for Brain Science report that two somatostatin receptors, SST1 and SST4, jointly regulate levels of neprilysin—an enzyme that breaks down amyloid-beta—in the hippocampus. In mouse models, activating the receptors raised neprilysin, reduced amyloid-beta buildup and improved memory-related behavior, the team said.

Scientists at Northern Arizona University are developing a non-invasive blood test that could help detect Alzheimer’s disease before symptoms appear by examining how the brain uses glucose through tiny blood-borne microvesicles. Led by assistant professor Travis Gibbons and supported in part by the Arizona Alzheimer’s Association, the project aims to enable earlier diagnosis and intervention, similar to how doctors manage cardiovascular disease.

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Researchers are exploring CAR T-cell therapy to slow the advancement of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) by targeting overactive immune cells in the brain. The approach aims to reduce neuron damage without curing the disease. Early studies suggest potential benefits for other neurodegenerative conditions as well.

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