Our Plan for Reinventing Alzheimer’s Disease R&D at UC San Diego

When the late Dr. Leon Thal, renowned neurologist and chairman of the Neurosciences Department at the UC San Diego School of Medicine, first imagined a research network able to conduct clinical trials of new therapies for Alzheimer’s disease, it was an idea ahead of its time.

The degenerative condition was poorly understood, with no existing infrastructure for developing new therapies, let alone preventive measures or a cure. The Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study (ADCS), co-founded by Dr. Thal and the National Institutes of Health in 1991, changed the course of Alzheimer’s research.

It has not been an easy road. Over the past quarter-century, ADCS at UC San Diego has conducted scores of trials, with thousands of participants testing dozens of promising therapeutics. Alzheimer’s is better understood, but effective therapies and a cure remain elusive. But this is why the ADCS exists. Success was never expected to come quick or simply. There have been and will be many setbacks along the way. Only a public research university like UC San Diego can invest the necessary time, expertise and commitment.

UC San Diego now seeks to reinvent ADCS in a time when the graying of the postwar baby boom means Alzheimer’s is even more pressing upon our minds.  Today, someone in the United States develops Alzheimer’s every 67 seconds. One in three seniors in the U.S. will die with it or another dementia. In every conceivable way, the reality of Alzheimer’s is growing.

ADCS is growing to meet the challenge too, adding more staff and resources, and gearing up for four new trials, funded by the National Institute on Aging, which are slated to begin over the next year. This is happening with the resolute support of UC San Diego Chancellor Pradeep Khosla and the university, and it is happening in very distinct ways.

First, a national search has begun for the next permanent ADCS director, who will be a global thought leader in neurosciences and specifically in Alzheimer’s disease, an unquestioned expert in both the latest research and the design and operations of clinical trials. I have already received unofficial job inquiries from some of the country’s finest Alzheimer’s researchers. ADCS deserves no less than the best.

Second, UC San Diego will innovate more, and more often. With advances in knowledge and technologies, there are new and better ways to conduct trials. They can be smaller, for example, more focused upon a single question, or upon a targeted cohort of patients. They can leverage tools that didn’t exist even a few years ago, including advances in imaging and biomarkers.  ADCS will be on that leading edge.

Third, ADCS will more thoroughly tap the

Author: David A. Brenner

David Brenner is the vice chancellor for health sciences at UC San Diego. As a distinguished physician-scientist, he serves as dean of the UC San Diego School of Medicine, leads the Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, UCSD Medical Center, and UCSD Medical Group. He oversees more than 900 faculty physicians, pharmacists, and scientists; 7,500 staff; over 600 medical and pharmacy students, and a health system that cares for approximately 125,000 patients annually. Brenner is a leader in the field of gastroenterological research, specializing in diseases of the liver. He is widely respected as a translational scientist whose work bridges the laboratory and clinic. His research has focused on the molecular pathogenesis of fibrotic liver disease and the genetic basis of liver disorders, and he is recognized as an outstanding clinician and teacher. He was the Editor-in-Chief of Gastroenterology, the premier journal in the field, for five years. Brenner was recruited to UC San Diego from the Columbia University Medical Center College of Physicians and Surgeons, where he was the Samuel Bard Professor and Chair of the Department of Medicine from 2003-2007, a member of the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, a member of the Columbia University Institute of Nutrition, and Physician-in-Chief of New York Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia. He earned his M.D. from the Yale University School of Medicine. After completing his residency at Yale-New Haven Medical Center, Brenner served as a research associate in the Genetics and Biochemistry Branch of the National Institute of Arthritis, Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health. Brenner first joined UC San Diego in 1985 as a gastroenterology fellow, later joining the medical school faculty, and serving as a physician at the Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System. He also served as a Pew Scholar in the biomedical sciences, a clinical investigator in the VA system, and as a professor and chief of the Division of Digestive Diseases and Nutrition at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.