Affiliation:
1. Krembil Research Institute, University Health Network, Departments of Medicine, Chemistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences,
University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, M5T 0S8, Canada
Abstract
Abstract:
There shall probably be no “magic bullet” for Alzheimer’s; rather, we should be pursuing
a “magic shotgun blast” that will target multiple complementary therapeutic receptors. Although
protein misfolding/oligomerization will probably be one of these targets, this alone is insufficient
and will require the co-administration of other therapeutic entities engaging targets, such as
immunopathy, gliopathy, mitochondriopathy, synaptotoxicity or others. Although polypharmacy
is emerging as the preferred therapeutic route, many questions remain unanswered. Should this be
a cocktail of biologics, a concoction of small molecules, or a judicious combination of both? Biologics
and small molecule drugs display both strengths and weaknesses. When addressing a disease
as complex and globally important as Alzheimer’s, there should be room for the continuing
development of both of these therapeutic classes. Each has much to offer, and when used with
their advantages and disadvantages in clear focus, an ultimate solution will probably require contributions
from both.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.