In this exclusive talk, Atlantia’s CEO, Andrea Doolan interviews Professor William Molloy. Professor Molloy is Head of Department Clinical Gerontology & Rehabilitation, University College Cork. Professor Molloy is also Chair Gerontology and Rehabilitation, Alzheimer’s disease, ageing, dementia care/diagnosis/treatment; advance care planning; clinical trials.
Prof. Molloy: "We are seeing a lot more of them, if you look at probably the greatest achievement of the 20th century, it was the doubling of life expectancy. If you looked at 1900’s, the average life expectancy was forty. By the end of the century, the average life expectancy had gone up to almost 80. So, we doubled life expectancy in the 20th century, and majority of deaths in the early century were infectious diseases, and then we had the chronic degenerative diseases like heart disease, and then as people lived into more old age, we're seeing that the generation neurological diseases.
The reason is that every year after 60, the prevalence of dementia doubles. So, if you have 2% of the population with dementia aged 60 to 65, it's 4% 65 to 70, it's 8% 70 to 75. It's up to 16% 75 to 80. When you go to 80, it's absolutely exponential, it’s up to 30%, and then over 90, it's more than 50%. The thing is that people are living longer, the number of people over 65 is doubling, but the number of people over 85 is quadrupling and a lot of people over 100 increasing a hundred-fold. We're living much longer, 60 is the new 80, and because we're seeing a lot more older people, the prevalence is absolutely exploding."
Prof. Molloy: "80 percent of all diseases are caused by diet, and nutrition is hugely important in development of dementia. If you look at Alzheimer's disease, there was a famous study, a guy called Snowden, and he got on the front cover of Time magazine, studied all these nuns down in Kentucky. They were all living in cloister, they were silent, they didn’t speak, he followed these women for eons and eventually they all died. What he showed, to make a long story short, more than 50 percent of the women had dementia or Alzheimer's disease. The pathologist said ‘that's classic Alzheimer's disease, plaques, tangles, neuronal loss’.
However, 50% of the women who had the pathology didn't actually have dementia, and the reason they didn't have dementia was because they didn't have any vascular changes, if the women had the vascular changes, which are the ischemic heart changes, which are dietary. If they had those vascular changes, 80 to 90% had dementia, but they didn't have the vascular changes, they didn't have dementia, even though they had the pathology. So, the truth is, even for Alzheimer's disease, nutrition is hugely important, I mean, B12 and the right vitamins, Obesity alone doubles your risk. All of these things are hugely important in the in the development of Alzheimer's disease. And, yes, I believe that there are nutritional supplements that we will find that would slow the progress or even prevent it.
The trouble is that we haven't done the research, the only research we've done up to now is in the treatment of dementia. Now we're moving back to mild cognitive impairment in terms of prevention. And from what I've seen, yes, diet is hugely important."
Prof. Molloy: "I have a graph that I'd like to show you now, it shows the natural progression from normal to age associated memory loss, to mild cognitive impairment, to dementia.
Mild cognitive impairment is kind of the waiting room for dementia, it's the early stages of dementia. We use the QMCI, which was developed for mild cognitive impairment, it's called The Quick Guide, or the Quick Mild Cognitive Impairment Screen. It took me 14 years to develop that, and what we do in the clinic is we look at the history initially. There has to be a change in memory, there has to be change in short term memory such as forgetting/repeating, there's a change. For example, if you've had the memory loss for 30 years, it's normal, if you've had the memory loss for a year, that's not good. The shorter the period of change is what you look at, and what happens with mild cognitive impairment
is the rate of changes, or ‘the delta’, the curve changes. You get a history of a year or so with change in memory, forgetting/repeating and stuff like that, more frustrated, you get sleep disturbance sometimes. You also get the behaviour changes, and the cognitive changes under the tests. Very importantly, you get the functional changes. We use functional ADL scores in the clinic, and we look at instrumental activities of daily living medications, finances, shopping, driving, all of those things."
Prof. Molloy: "Usually, the MCI's will be aware of a cognitive change. The rule of thumb is if the person comes in complaining of memory loss and the caregiver says they don't have it, that person tends to be depressed, If the person comes in complaining of memory loss and the caregiver says they've memory loss, it's MCI. If the caregiver comes in complaining of memory loss and the person says they don't have any memory loss, that could be dementia. So, as they progress further, they lose insight. With dementia it’s quite obvious, you can almost just talk to the person, the subtle difference is the normal and MCI. Normal take a long, very slow progression, very slow change.
So, the thing for Atlantia is, you do not want to be including people in your studies that are normal ageing, you want MCI's, you want clean MCI's. But it's not just a simple thing of that score on that test, you have to have the history, you have to have the functional change, you have to have the cognitive change, and you also have to behaviour changes. When all of those are together, then you include them in a trial, if you're not sure, bring them back in six months."
Prof. Molloy: "Oh, absolutely, I mean, how do we get a clean diagnosis of MCI and how do we treat them? It's all of the research."
Prof. Molloy: "That's the hope. That's the hope. We do all the blood work, we make sure that not depressed, we look at what drugs could be causing it, and we try to get them exercise more, look at their diet, are they overweight, you know, all of those things."
Prof. Molloy: "No, the MOCA and the Mini-Mental (State Examination) were developed to pick up dementia, they're scored out of 30 and 26 is the cut-off. So, the trouble with the MOCA and Mini-Mental is that four points measure that whole journey from normal ageing, to MCI, to dementia. With the QMCI, the cut-off is 50, out of 100, Meaning there is a 50-point range with which people can fall in. Like I said, the QMCI took 14 years and thousands of patients and an iterative process to develop. I used to have the ABCS 135, and I was using that for a long time, published it, but I couldn't get the sensitivity above 80 percent, or the specificity. The other great thing about this one (QMCI) is that it takes three to five minutes to complete, the others take 12 minutes and there's multiple forms. We also have the QMC, which is the quick memory check that the caregiver can give to the patient. So, if you are conducting a human study, the caregiver can be scoring the patient at home without coming to clinic."
Prof. Molloy: "Yes, we did a study some years ago where we looked at people who are assessed in clinic and assessed at home in clinical trials. We showed that if they were assessed in the home, there were 50% less dropouts. Furthermore, if people were coming to clinic, they had 50% more ‘side effects'."
Prof. Molloy: "You're talking about MCI trials, well, we're actually going to do an MCI trial. We've got an MCI trial planned now with lions' mane mushroom (variation of classical mushroom), and this trial is ready to go."
Prof. Molloy: "Somebody has a product that they want to try, the first thing we do is we give it once a day, a small dose, and then we escalate up the dose, twice a day, push it up and see how much is tolerated, where we hit our ceiling. Then we have an idea of what kind of doses we're using. While you're doing that, we're doing the cognitive testing, we're doing all of our tests to see if we get a signal and at what stage, we spend most of our time in our pilots, we really have to get tight. We want to know what the best tolerated dose is, once a day, twice a day, how long do we need to get a response? Once we have that data, then we start going into trials, there's no point sort of picking a number before you start, it needs to be evidence based. That's what we sat down, and we talked about in the upcoming trial, how we find the signal, the duration, the dose, the timing, picking the patients. Once we have that, then we get in to open label trials. You start open label trials for six weeks, eight weeks, we don't get to RCT's for a long time. When we're at the stage of RCT's, we know what signal we're going to get, we know what's going to happen, the RCT is where you spend the big money."
Prof. Molloy: "Yes, because that's your big expenditure, and you have a relatively short runway with these things, you can't be fiddling around for years. So, we need to get patients, try different doses, try playing with different things and try looking for our signals. Which domain is the trial going to be in, the visuospatial? short term memory? Is it the verbal fluency? Which part of the neuropsychological profile? Which part of the behaviour?
What does the caregiver know? If the patient is sleeping better, eating better, what's the change? We look at that very, very careful and holistic way. That's when we start moving when we start to see the signal. If we don't see it, then we don't move into RCT's because you're wasting money. I think it is important for companies and clients and sponsors to understand and listen to the experts, you know, and trust them and trust them. We're not dogmatic, we're not saying you have to do it this way, we're very reasonable and rational.
Because we're doing research, you know, that you go through the various stages, you do a pilot study, you check tolerance, you investigate dose, you know that the chance for success then is much greater by the time you get around to the RCT. And we're sharing with you as we go. I mean, with your data, you'd have a weekly readout, you could do a weekly review with the client and say, this what we recommend, with a clear strategy, but it's flexible."
Prof. Molloy: "And that's the benefit really of doing an open label study early on isn't it? If it doesn't work and an open label study, it isn’t going to work on a double-blind, And the double-blind is the big commitment."
Prof. Molloy: "It's a pleasure, I love working with Atlantia."