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Nutrient
mixture improves memory in patients with
early Alzheimer’s
July 13, 2012--A clinical trial of an
Alzheimer’s disease treatment developed at
MIT has found that the nutrient cocktail can
improve memory in patients with early
Alzheimer’s. The results confirm and expand
the findings of an earlier trial of the
nutritional supplement, which is designed to
promote new connections between brain cells.
Alzheimer’s patients gradually lose those
connections, known as synapses, leading to
memory loss and other cognitive impairments.
The supplement mixture, known as Souvenaid,
appears to stimulate growth of new synapses,
says Richard Wurtman, the Cecil H. Green
Distinguished Professor Emeritus at MIT, who
invented the nutrient mixture.
“You want to improve the numbers of
synapses, not by slowing their degradation —
though of course you’d love to do that too —
but rather by increasing the formation of
the synapses,” Wurtman says.
To do that, Wurtman came up with a mixture
of three naturally occurring dietary
compounds: choline, uridine and the omega-3
fatty acid DHA. Choline can be found in
meats, nuts and eggs, and omega-3 fatty
acids are found in a variety of sources,
including fish, eggs, flaxseed and meat from
grass-fed animals. Uridine is produced by
the liver and kidney, and is present in some
foods as a component of RNA.
These nutrients are precursors to the lipid
molecules that, along with specific
proteins, make up brain-cell membranes,
which form synapses. To be effective, all
three precursors must be administered
together.
Results of the clinical trial, conducted in
Europe, appear in the July 10 online edition
of the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease. The
new findings are encouraging because very
few clinical trials have produced consistent
improvement in Alzheimer’s patients, says
Jeffrey Cummings, director of the Cleveland
Clinic’s Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health.
“Memory loss is the central characteristic
of Alzheimer’s, so something that improves
memory would be of great interest,” says
Cummings, who was not part of the research
team.
Plans for commercial release of the
supplement are not finalized, according to
Nutricia, the company testing and marketing
Souvenaid, but it will likely be available
in Europe first. Nutricia is the specialized
health care division of the food company
Danone, known as Dannon in the United
States.
Making connections
Wurtman first came up with the idea of
targeting synapse loss to combat Alzheimer’s
about 10 years ago. In animal studies, he
showed that his dietary cocktail boosted the
number of dendritic spines, or small
outcroppings of neural membranes, found in
brain cells. These spines are necessary to
form new synapses between neurons.
Following the successful animal studies,
Philip Scheltens, director of the Alzheimer
Center at VU University Medical Center in
Amsterdam, led a clinical trial in Europe
involving 225 patients with mild
Alzheimer’s. The patients drank Souvenaid or
a control beverage daily for three months.
That study, first reported in 2008, found
that 40 percent of patients who consumed the
drink improved in a test of verbal memory,
while 24 percent of patients who received
the control drink improved their
performance.
The new study, performed in several European
countries and overseen by Scheltens as
principal investigator, followed 259
patients for six months. Patients, whether
taking Souvenaid or a placebo, improved
their verbal-memory performance for the
first three months, but the placebo patients
deteriorated during the following three
months, while the Souvenaid patients
continued to improve. For this trial, the
researchers used more comprehensive memory
tests taken from the neuropsychological test
battery, often used to assess Alzheimer’s
patients in clinical research.
Patients showed a very high compliance rate:
About 97 percent of the patients followed
the regimen throughout the study, and no
serious side effects were seen.
Both clinical trials were sponsored by
Nutricia. MIT has patented the mixture of
nutrients used in the study, and Nutricia
holds the exclusive license on the patent.
Brain patterns
In the new study, the researchers used
electroencephalography (EEG) to measure how
patients’ brain-activity patterns changed
throughout the study. They found that as the
trial went on, the brains of patients
receiving the supplements started to shift
from patterns typical of dementia to more
normal patterns. Because EEG patterns
reflect synaptic activity, this suggests
that synaptic function increased following
treatment, the researchers say.
Patients entering this study were in the
early stages of Alzheimer’s disease,
averaging around 25 on a scale of dementia
that ranges from 1 to 30, with 30 being
normal. A previous trial found that the
supplement cocktail does not work in
patients with Alzheimer’s at a more advanced
stage. This makes sense, Wurtman says,
because patients with more advanced dementia
have probably already lost many neurons, so
they can’t form new synapses.
A two-year trial involving patients who
don’t have Alzheimer’s, but who are starting
to show mild cognitive impairment, is now
underway. If the drink seems to help, it
could be used in people who test positive
for very early signs of Alzheimer’s, before
symptoms appear, Wurtman says. Such tests,
which include PET scanning of the
hippocampus, are now rarely done because
there are no good Alzheimer’s treatments
available.