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by pcrh
54 days ago
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The Cochrane review did not ask the question of whether Lecanemab (for example) worked, it asked the more general question of whether targeting amyloid worked. If targeting amyloid, generally, worked you might expect all approaches to targeting amyloid to show some efficacy. So they included all those for which clinical trials had been conducted. Obviously some treatments didn't pass the threshold required and so were not subsequently approved. If you only included successful trials you would bias the outcome. It's possible, of course, that some methods of targeting amyloid might work where others failed. But even those that claim success (Donanemab and Lecanemab) have a very modest benefit. |
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And since these were developed using different methods and epitopes, it does not make sense to pool them together when doing a comparison. It's obvious that if you combine modestly beneficial compounds and compounds with zero beneficial effect then the mean effect will be worse than the modestly beneficial compounds.
And when you do so just because they were aimed at the same molecular target, not even considering if anyone claims that the old, unapproved antibody-therapies, with no positive studies to support them, have any effect, what you are doing is somewhere between extreme ignorance and deception.