AARP Hearing Center
Neuroscientist Arnon Rosenthal thinks the cure for Alzheimer’s disease could lie in a drug that boosts the brain’s immune system to slow or stop the disease’s progression. And thanks in part to an investment from a venture capital fund that’s out to change how dementia is treated, his San Francisco biotech company is testing the concept in human clinical trials.
“We were able to convert a completely academic concept into actual drugs that are in the clinic, in patients now,” says the 64-year-old scientist, describing the investment’s impact. “We were able to hire an exceptional group of scientists, build a clinical team, move to a more functional facility.”
The cash infusion came from the Dementia Discovery Fund (DDF), a $350 million venture capital fund dedicated to finding breakthrough drugs for Alzheimer’s and other dementias. Last June the AARP Brain Health Fund invested $60 million in the DDF to mark the nonprofit’s 60th anniversary.
“Since its inception, AARP’s mission has been to improve the lives of older Americans, and there is no more urgent need than discovering new treatments and therapies for dementia,” says Scott Frisch, executive vice president and chief operating officer of AARP.
Launched in 2015 as the brainchild of former British Prime Minister David Cameron, the DDF makes early-stage investments in companies at work on groundbreaking treatments to combat all types of dementia. About 50 million people worldwide suffer from such conditions, and there are nearly 10 million new cases every year.
Despite huge investments, the only dementia drugs currently available are for temporary treatment of individual symptoms. Traditionally, dementia researchers have focused on two proteins that cause plaques and tangles in the brain and are thought to damage nerve cells. But dozens of clinical trials targeting those proteins have failed. So the DDF is putting money into novel and alternative approaches.
“We are trying to invest in one of the most difficult areas of science,” says Angus Grant, CEO of the London-based fund. The DDF’s goal: funding development that leads to at least three new dementia drugs that show strong evidence of efficacy in human clinical trials.
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