Overview

A Research Study Looking at the Effect of Semaglutide on the Immune System and Other Biological Processes in People With Alzheimer's Disease

Status:
Not yet recruiting
Trial end date:
2025-06-19
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
The study is being conducted to understand how the medicine, semaglutide, affects the immune system and other biological processes in people with Alzheimer's disease. Semaglutide is a medicine that doctors can prescribe in some countries for the treatment of type 2 diabetes and excess body weight. This study will help us understand whether semaglutide can also be used for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease. The study will last for about 77 weeks. In the first 12 weeks of treatment, participants will either get semaglutide (active medicine) or placebo (inactive dummy medicine). Which treatment participants get is decided by chance. In the following 52 weeks of treatment, all participants taking part in the study will get semaglutide. Participants must have a study partner, who is willing to take part in the study. Participants will get study medicine in a pen injector. The study partner will need to inject the study medicine into the skin of participant's stomach, thigh or upper arm once every week.
Phase:
Phase 3
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Novo Nordisk A/S
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Male or female, aged 55-75 years (both inclusive) at the time of signing the informed
consent

- Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or mild dementia of the Alzheimer's type according to
the National Institute on Aging- Alzheimer's Association (NIA-AA) 2018 criteria

- Clinical dementia rating (CDR) global score of 0.5 or 1 at screening (visit 1)

- Amyloid positivity established with either historical amyloid positron emission
tomography (PET) or historical cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) Aβ1-42 or historical CSF
Aβ1-42/Aβ1-40 (historical data within the last 5 years) or blood sample for amyloid
biomarker (Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio and p-tau217/np-tau217 ratio) at screening (visit 1)

- Treated with acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (approved for the treatment of
Alzheimer's disease) and on stable dose for greater than 90 days before screening
(visit 1)

Exclusion Criteria:

- Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan suggestive of clinically significant
structural central nervous system (CNS) disease confirmed by local read (example
cerebral large-vessel disease [large vessel (cortical) infarcts greater than 10
millimeter (mm) in diameter], prior macro-haemorrhage [greater than 1centimeter cube
(cm^3)], cerebral vascular malformations, cortical hemosiderosis, intracranial
aneurism(s), intracranial tumours, changes suggestive of normal pressure
hydrocephalus)

- Brain MRI scan suggestive of significant small vessel pathology confirmed by local
read and defined as greater than 1 lacunar infarct and/or white matter hyperintensity
(WMH) Fazekas13 scale greater than 2, (white matter [WM] greater than 20 mm) in the
deep white matter and periventricular regions

- History or evidence of autoimmune diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease,
rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, glomerulonephritis, psoriasis (but not limited to): Any
other medical condition that would require use of systemic corticosteroids or
immunosuppressants or immunostimulants in the 12 months prior to screening (visit 1)

- Received a vaccine product (including booster) 4 weeks prior to screening (visit 1) or
expected to receive a vaccine product (including booster) before visit 5

- Use of any systemic immunomodulating drugs (small molecules and/or biologics) in the
last 12 months prior to screening (visit 1) or anticipated use of such drugs during
study intervention period 1 (i.e., during the first 12 weeks of treatment until visit
5), such as corticosteroids for systemic use, immunostimulants and immunosuppressants