All GLP-1 Agonists Should, Theoretically, Cure Alzheimer's Dementia but Dulaglutide Might Be More Effective Than the Others.
J Clin Med · 2024
Last updated 2026-06-29GLP-1 drugs may help treat Alzheimer's dementia because their receptors are found in all major brain cell types. Among these drugs, dulaglutide enters the brain most effectively at 61.8% and showed significant cognitive benefits in a large study of 8,828 participants. Other GLP-1 drugs have either helped or had no effect on cognition, possibly due to limited brain access.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Clin Med, 2024 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 17 |
| Relative citation ratio | 3.39 |
| NIH percentile | 86 |
| Molecules | dulaglutide |
Abstract
Addressing the dysfunctions of all brain cell types in Alzheimer's disease (AD) should cure the dementia, an objective that might be achieved by GLP-1 agonist drugs, because receptors for GLP-1 are present in all of the main brain cell types, i.e., neurons, oligodendroglia, astroglia, microglia, endothelial cells and pericytes. This article describes the benefits provided to all of those brain cell types by GLP-1 agonist drugs. The article uses studies in humans, not rodents, to describe the effect of GLP-1 agonists upon cognition, because rodents' brains differ from those of humans in so many ways that results from rodent studies may not be totally transferable to humans. Commercially available GLP-1 agonists have mostly shown either positive effects upon cognition or no effects. One important reason for no effects is a reduced rate of entering brain parenchyma. Dulaglutide has the greatest entry to brain, at 61.8%, among the available GLP-1 agonists, and seems to offer the best likelihood for cure of AD. Although there is only one study of cognition that used dulaglutide, it was randomized, placebo controlled, and very large; it involved 8828 participants and showed significant benefit to cognition. A clinical trial to test the hypothesis that dulaglutide may cure AD should have, as its primary outcome, a 30% greater cure rate of AD by dulaglutide than that achieved by an equipoise arm of, e.g., lithium plus memantine.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 38999294 ↗
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