Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Tauvid (flortaucipir F18) for intravenous injection, the first drug used to help image a distinctive characteristic of Alzheimer’s disease in the brain called tau pathology. Tauvid is a radioactive diagnostic agent for adult patients with cognitive impairment who are being evaluated for Alzheimer’s disease. Tauvid is indicated for positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of the brain to estimate the density and distribution of aggregated tau neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs), a primary marker of Alzheimer’s disease.
“Alzheimer’s disease is a devastating condition that affects millions of Americans. This approval will provide health care professionals with a new type of brain scan to use in patients being evaluated for Alzheimer’s disease,” said Charles Ganley, M.D., director of Office of Specialty Medicine in FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “While there are FDA approved imaging drugs for amyloid pathology, this is the first drug approved for imaging tau pathology, one of the two neuropathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease, and represents a major advance for patients with cognitive impairment being evaluated for the condition.”
Two proteins – tau and amyloid – are recognized as hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease. In patients with Alzheimer’s disease, pathological forms of tau proteins develop inside neurons in the brain, creating neurofibrillary tangles. After Tauvid is administered intravenously, it binds to sites in the brain associated with this tau protein misfolding. The brain can then be imaged with a PET scan to help identify the presence of tau pathology.
Alzheimer’s disease is a progressive disease that typically begins with mild memory loss. It is one of the top 10 leading causes of death in the United States. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in 2014, there were as many as 5 million Americans living with Alzheimer’s disease. This number is projected to nearly triple to 14 million by 2060. Currently, Alzheimer’s disease can only be definitively diagnosed by pathologic evaluation of a patient’s brain once they have died (post-mortem). There are three imaging agents approved for post-mortem amyloid pathology with PET scans.
The safety and effectiveness of Tauvid imaging was evaluated in two clinical studies. In each study, five evaluators read and interpreted the Tauvid imaging. The evaluators were blinded to clinical information and interpreted the imaging as positive or negative.
The first study enrolled 156 patients who were terminally ill and agreed to undergo Tauvid imaging and participate in a post-mortem brain donation program. In 64 of the patients who died within nine months of the Tauvid brain scan, evaluators’ reading of the Tauvid scan was compared to post-mortem readings from independent pathologists who evaluated the density and distribution of NFTs in the same brain. The study showed evaluators reading the Tauvid images had a high probability of correctly evaluating patients with tau pathology and had an average-to-high probability of correctly evaluating patients without tau pathology.
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