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AI-guided patient stratification improves outcomes and efficiency in the AMARANTH Alzheimer’s Disease clinical trial

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) drug discovery has been hampered by patient heterogeneity, and the lack of sensitive tools for precise stratification. Here, we demonstrate that our robust and interpretable AI-guided tool (predictive prognostic model, PPM) enhances precision in patient stratification, improving outcomes and decreasing sample size for a failed AD clinical trial. The AMARANTH trial of lanabecestat, a BACE1 inhibitor, was deemed futile, as treatment did not change cognitive outcomes, despite reducing β-amyloid. Employing the PPM, we re-stratify patients precisely using baseline data and demonstrate significant treatment effects; that is, 46% slowing of cognitive decline for slow progressive patients at earlier stages of neurodegeneration. In contrast, rapid progressive patients did not show significant change in cognitive outcomes. Our results provide evidence for AI-guided patient stratification that is more precise than standard patient selection approaches (e.g. β-amyloid positivity) and has strong potential to enhance efficiency and efficacy of future AD trials.

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Journal Title

Nature Communications

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Journal ISSN

2041-1723
2041-1723

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Publisher

Nature Portfolio

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
Royal Society (INF\R2\202107)
Alan Turing Institute (Unknown)
EPSRC (via Alan Turing Institute) (EP/T001569/1)
EPSRC (via Alan Turing Institute) (T2-14)
Wellcome Trust (221633/Z/20/Z)
Royal Society

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