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What kind of soured me on whether to recommend lecanumab in the clinic or not - the effect size and the slope, vs. the risk of hemorrhages/"ARIAS".

I don't claim that it's obviously the right move for every Alzheimer patient at the moment. It would be great to increase the effect size and reduce ARIA rates. My central claim, again, is that the amyloid hypothesis is correct, not that we have a cure.

the issue and maybe the main effort isn't so much clearing out the bad stuff (abnormal amyloid clumps/synuclein clumps) in the cells, it's trying to figure out what biological process converts the normal, functioning form of the protein into the abnormal/insoluble/nonfunctional protein

Yes, but it appears that these are one and the same thing. That is, amyloid and tau (mis)conformation seems to be self-replicating via a prion-like mechanism in locally-connected regions. This has been established by cryo-electron microscopy of human proteins, as well as controlled introduction of misfolded proteins into mouse brains.



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