Scattered Brain Bleeds, Vasculitis in Alzheimer’s Trial Death


Case report is published days ahead of FDA lecanemab decision

A computer rendering of a person’s transparent head with a cerebral hemorrhage highlighted

A fatal bleeding event in an Alzheimer’s clinical trial participant may have been linked with the investigational anti-amyloid agent lecanemab, a case report suggested.

However, drug trialists are not willing to assign blame yet, especially as lecanemab’s fate hangs in a potential FDA approval for early Alzheimer’s disease later this week.

Information about the case initially surfacedopens in a new tab or window just days before the November report of the randomized CLARITY AD trialopens in a new tab or window: a 65-year-old lecanemab user with cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) died after being given tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) for an acute ischemic stroke that happened during the open-label phase of the trial.

In separate letters published in the New England Journal of Medicine, the Northwestern team who treated the stroke patient shed light on the numerous, unusual acute intracerebral bleedsopens in a new tab or window observed, while the CLARITY study investigators stressed the potential role of the patient’s underlying conditionopens in a new tab or window, not lecanemab.

The trial participant was homozygous for the APOE4 allele and had a last lecanemab infusion 4 days before the stroke occurred. A head MRI performed 81 days before the stroke showed mild small-vessel disease, with no microhemorrhages, edema, or amyloid-related imaging abnormalities (ARIA); CT performed just before tPA administration showed no hemorrhage, either, according to neurocritical care specialist Sherry Chou, MD, and colleagues of Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.

The patient received IV tPA, as there were no contraindications to thrombolysis. Problems emerged 50 minutes into the infusion, when hypertension suddenly developed and forced tPA infusion to be stopped. CT showed extensive, multifocal intraparenchymal hemorrhages without systemic bleeding.

Chou and colleagues administered cryoprecipitate and tranexamic acid. They also gave multiple antiseizure medications for the frequent, nonconvulsive seizures seen on electroencephalography. Three days later, the patient underwent endotracheal intubation, and imaging showed acute right thalamocapsular infarction and innumerable multifocal cortical and subcortical hemorrhages with surrounding edema.

At the request of the family, the patient received comfort measures before dying. Autopsy showed extensive multifocal intraparenchymal hemorrhages, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, Alzheimer’s disease neuropathologic changes, and diffuse histiocytic vasculitis with necrotizing vasculopathy involving amyloid deposition within blood vessel walls.

“The extensive number and variation in sizes of the cerebral hemorrhages in this patient would be unusual as a complication of tPA solely related to cerebrovascular amyloid. The findings raise the possibility of cerebral hemorrhages and necrotizing vasculopathy associated with tPA infusion in a patient with cerebrovascular amyloid who had received lecanemab,” Chou’s group wrote.

In a written response, CLARITY AD investigators Marwan Sabbagh, MD, of Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix, Arizona, and Christopher van Dyck, MD, of Yale School of Medicine, clarified that autopsy findings may have been affected by several intervening events since the time of the patient’s hemorrhage.

The duo also highlighted the known risk of intracerebral hemorrhage — and uncommon cases of vasculitis — in persons with CAA not on anti-amyloid therapy.

“We agree that this case raises important management issues for patients with Alzheimer’s disease, particularly patients who are homozygous for the APOE4 allele,” Sabbagh and van Dyck said.

Having occurred during CLARITY AD’s extension phase, the death was not counted among the 13 deaths (six in the lecanemab arm and seven in placebo) in the trial report of nearly 1,800 people.

Also not included was a 79-year-old woman’s deathopens in a new tab or window — also during the extension phase of CLARITY AD — that occurred more recently after the patient experienced extensive brain swelling and bleeding and seizures. Previously, a man in his late 80s died of a brain hemorrhage after using lecanemab and apixaban (Eliquis) for atrial fibrillation, though lecanemab developer Eisai argued that the death was unrelated to the drug.

During the randomized phase of CLARITY, no deaths had been judged to be related to lecanemab or occurred with ARIA. ARIA with edema or effusions occurred in 12.6% of people who received lecanemab. Combined cerebral microhemorrhages, cerebral macrohemorrhages, and superficial siderosis occurred in 17.3%, study authors reported.

CLARITY’s main finding was that lecanemab was associated with a statistically significant albeit modest reduction in clinical decline after 18 months in people with early Alzheimer’s disease.

The FDA is expected to announce in the upcoming days whether to grant lecanemab accelerated approval for early Alzheimer’s disease. Some have suggested the agency requires a risk evaluation and mitigation strategy in face of fears of the drug’s ARIA risks.

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