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Disease-modifying drugs for Alzheimer disease: implications for people in Canada

Disease-modifying drugs for Alzheimer disease: implications for people in Canada

Journal article

At least 250 000 people in Canada live with mild dementia, and 1.3 million live with mild cognitive impairment. Alzheimer disease is implicated in 60%–70% of cases of dementia and 30%–77% of cases of mild cognitive impairment.4,5 There are no recommended medications for treating people in Canada with mild cognitive impairment or dementia caused by Alzheimer disease. No disease-modifying medications for the treatment of Alzheimer disease have been approved in Canada. Lecanemab was the first disease-modifying medication for Alzheimer disease to be granted full approval by the US Food and Drug Administration, and a second such medication — donanemab — is under review by the agency; lecanemab is under review by Health Canada. If disease-modifying medications for Alzheimer disease are approved by Health Canada, substantial planning at the health system level is needed to support their implementation, because of high medication costs, and a clear need for post-marketing surveillance, given limited certainty of effect from existing trial data. We discuss disease-modifying medications for Alzheimer disease that have recently been brought to market and approved for use in other jurisdictions, as these may become accessible in Canada in due course.

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