Drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy could significantly cut dementia risk

Importance Score: 82 / 100 šŸŸ¢

GLP-1 drugs may keep the brain cognitively sharp by reducing inflammation

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Diabetes and weight loss treatments such as Ozempic and Wegovy, known as GLP-1 agonists, could significantly reduce the risk of developing any type of dementia, according to a meta-analysis of 26 clinical trials with more than 160,000 participants.

The treatments, which include medications like semaglutide, liraglutide and exenatide, have been linked to a slightly reduced dementia risk before, but this was based on observational studies looking at health records.

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Now, Catriona Reddin at the University of Galway in Ireland and her colleagues have combined the results of randomised trials where a range of GLP-1 drugs were given to people with type 2 diabetes who hadnā€™t yet been diagnosed with dementia or cognitive impairment, tested against a placebo. They found that taking these drugs seemed to significantly reduce the risk of developing dementia or cognitive impairment during the trialsā€™ minimum six-month follow-up periods.

ā€œThe gold standard would be one large, randomised trial to answer this question, but this definitely adds another stream of evidence [to past studies],ā€ says Ziyad Al-Aly at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri, who wasnā€™t involved in this research.

Diabetes may be a risk factor for dementia, so it has been suggested that just controlling blood sugar levels produces this protective effect. For instance, a study by Jingchuan Guo at the University of Florida and her colleagues suggests that a class of diabetes drugs called SGLT2 inhibitors, which lower blood sugar levels by helping the kidneys remove excess glucose, may reduce the risk of Alzheimerā€™s disease or related kinds of dementia, based on peopleā€™s health records.

But in Reddin and her teamā€™s placebo-controlled analysis, SGLT2 inhibitors werenā€™t linked to a reduced dementia risk, which suggests that the protective effects of GLP-1 drugs go beyond just blood sugar control.

Although the exact mechanism is unclear, these drugs have been linked to reduced inflammation, with neuroinflammation increasingly being recognised as a cause of dementia. By reducing chronic inflammation, they may slow cell death in the brain, says Reddin.

GLP-1 drugs may also protect against cardiovascular problems, such as plaque build-up in the arteries and high blood pressure, which could otherwise cause dementia.

ā€œAll roads seem to be leading to Rome. We can see from multiple observational studies and now an analysis of placebo-controlled studies that these medications have this [anti-dementia] effect,ā€ says Al-Aly.

Al-Aly stresses that we arenā€™t yet at a place where someone who is at an increased risk of developing dementia would be prescribed GLP-1 drugs to lower their odds. But he also says doctors may consider offering these medications over other glucose-lowering ones to people with type 2 diabetes who are also at an increased risk of cognitive decline, for example if they had a family history of the condition. ā€œThis research will increase a physicianā€™s propensity for prescribing these medications,ā€ he says.

Reddin notes that the analysisā€™ minimum six-month follow-up period was relatively short, and says ā€œlarge trials should be conducted to specifically study the effect of glucose-lowering therapy on dementia and cognitive declineā€. Two clinical trials investigating semaglutide as a therapy for early Alzheimerā€™s disease are expected to conclude this year.

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source: newscientist.com


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