dc.identifier.citation | Hillerstrom, H.,Fisher, R.,P. Janicki,M.,Chicoine, B., T. Christian, B., Esbensen, A., Esralew, L., Fortea, J., Hartley, S., Hassenstab, J., M. Keller, S., Krinsky-McHale, S., Lai, F.,Levin, J.,McCarron, M., McDade, E., Sophie Rebillat, A., Diana Rosas, H., Silverman, W., Strydom, A., H. Zaman, S. & Zetterberg, H., Adapting prescribing criteria for amyloid-targeted antibodies for adults with Down syndrome, The Journal of Alzheimer's Association, 20, 5, 2024, 3649 - 3656 | en |
dc.description.abstract | Prior authorization criteria for Federal Drug Administration (FDA) approved
immunotherapeutics, among the class of anti-amyloid monoclonal antibodies (mAbs),
established by state drug formulary committees, are tailored for adults with late-onset
Alzheimer’s disease. This overlooks adults with Down syndrome (DS), who often experience dementia at a younger age and with different diagnostic assessment outcomes.
This exclusion may deny DS adults access to potential disease-modifying treatments.
To address this issue, an international expert panel convened to establish adaptations
of prescribing criteria suitable for DS patients and parameters for access to Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) registries. The panel proposed mitigating
disparities by modifying CMS and payer criteria to account for younger onset age,
using alternative language and assessment instruments validated for cognitive decline
in the DS population. The panel also recommended enhancing prescribing clinicians’
diagnostic capabilities for DS and initiated awareness-raising activities within healthcare organizations. These efforts facilitated discussions with federal officials, aimed
at achieving equity in access to anti-amyloid immunotherapeutics, with implications
for national authorities worldwide evaluating these and other new disease-modifying
therapeutics for Alzheimer’s disease. | en |