Yesterday I laid out the pros and cons of buying Cassava Sciences that day. The post is reproduced below the ***
Everything I hoped for came true. The 50 patients on Sumafilam were followed for 9 months and their ADAS-CoG score improved by 3 points. This is unprecedented for any Alzheimer’s drug. Historical controls show that Alzheimer patients lost 5 points a year on ADAS-CoG. So this is a potential net gain with therapy vs. no therapyof 6 – 7 ADAS-CoG points. Recall that a perfect ADAS-CoG score is 70. I’ve been unable to find what the average score of 50 patients was on entry. The paper isn’t published, but is public record results having been presented at conferences (such as today). Recall that historical controls must be used as the study was open label (e.g. no concurrent controls).
Addendum 30 July: Since everything turns on ADAS-CoG, here is a link to a complete description along with some discussion — https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5929311/
On a slide from Cassava’s presentation yesterday the ADAS-CoG average of the 50 patients on entry 9 months ago was 16.6. With a perfect score of 70, it’s clear that these people were significantly impaired (please look at the test items to see how simple the tasks in ADAS-CoG actually are). So an improvement of 3 points at 9 months is significant, particularly since a drop of 5 points is expected each year — yes I’ve seen plenty of Alzheimer patients with ADAS-CoG scores of zero or close to it.
However using historical controls is a no no particularly in neurology and cardiology.
Why?
Should you buy Cassava Sciences today?
Tomorrow Cassava Sciences will announce the interim results of an open label trial of its Alzheimer drug Sumafilam in 50 patients receiving the drug for 9 months. Should you buy the stock today?
The stock (symbol SAVA) has had a huge run this year starting at 7 and closing yesterday 27 July ’21 at 127.50.
I’ve been interested in the stock for several reasons
l. As a neurologist, I’ve watched patients, family members and friends deteriorate and die, being totally unable to help them.
2. I’ve known one of the principals in the company since she was a teenager in Montana — Lindsay Burns https://luysii.wordpress.com/2021/02/02/montana-girl-does-good-real-good/
3. Sumafilam is thought to work by a completely different mechanism of action than previous approaches (all of which have failed to produce a useful drug)– https://luysii.wordpress.com/2021/03/25/the-science-behind-cassava-sciences-sava/
In fact some of these therapies have actually made Alzheimer’s worse [ Nature Reviews Drug Discovery vol. 18 p. 327 ’19 ]
Tomorrow’s results should move the stock significantly. If there is no improvement in cognition the stock will plummet. If there is improvement the stock should soar, at least double again. Why? Because we have no useful therapy. Forget Biogen’s drug Aduhelm — the FDA advisory committee resigned in protest after the drug was approved, as the evidence for help was minimal at best.
Of course I’m rooting for the drug as a clinician and as a friend of Lindsay.
There is some evidence that the results tomorrow will show that the drug helps