WASHINGTON, D.C.—Amidst a tempest of election season political turbulence, a wave of bipartisan unity appears to be rising in support of research targeting Alzheimer’s disease. “Every one of us knows how vulnerable we are,” says Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill), , organized by . The Democratic senator shared the stage with his Republican colleague Susan Collins of Maine, who warned that the nation is facing a “tsunami of cases.”
In fact, as baby boomers enter old age and people are living longer, the number of cases will triple from 5.3 million today to 16 million in 2050, according to the Alzheimer’s Association, which is holding its annual international conference here this week. will succumb to this most common cause of dementia. “Alzheimer’s disease is going to bankrupt Medicare and Medicaid,” Collins says. “We cannot afford to make this investment [in research].”
The Atlantic's Steve Clemons with Senator Dick Durbin and U.S. Senator Susan Collins at #AtlanticAlz | Photos by Kristoffer Tripplaar
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“Constituents resonate to Alzheimer’s disease,” says Collins, who sees widespread support for research across her party. Even ardent critics of the contentious Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”), including Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, are united with liberal Democrats on this issue. Collins cites a concrete example: “Republicans are in control of the Senate and they just in Alzheimer’s disease funding.”
Members of Congress on both sides of the aisle are calling for a national strategy to defeat Alzheimer’s disease, modeled on the rapid response to the AIDS epidemic or the war on cancer started 40 years ago. Last week Collins proposed new legislation to address the lack of Medicare coverage for long-term care, for example to provide the custodial in-home care that an Alzheimer’s patient must have. Senator Durbin has in budget to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) over the next 10 years to make the necessary investment for breakthroughs in Alzheimer’s disease and other biomedical research.
There’s little question that more funding for Alzheimer’s research makes sense. Despite the demographic tsunami, investment in Alzheimer’s is currently on heart disease and cancer. But Congressional enthusiasts of all stripes should be prepared for the fact that much like the “war on cancer”, an all-out assault on Alzheimer’s is unlikely to yield a cure. Progress will likely take a different, more piecemeal shape.
This image shows a PiB-PET scan of a patient with Alzheimer's disease on the left and an elderly person with normal memory on the right. Areas of red and yellow show high concentrations of PiB in the brain and suggest high amounts of amyloid deposits in these areas. (Source: )The key will be early diagnosis. is a brain imaging technique that can detect amyloid deposits in the brain 10 to 15 years ahead of the memory loss. These deposits eventually damage brain cells and cause dementia. Drugs that have been developed to attack these deposits of amyloid protein . (In fact, in some cases these drugs have worsened the disease.) The consensus of experts is that drug treatment must be started early, before years of slowly advancing pathology reach a point of no return.
Alzheimer’s disease affects not only the person afflicted, erasing their memories and leaving them isolated and confused, it affects everyone in the family. Collins, who recently , says she knows this from first-hand family experience: “Alzheimer’s disease affects even a grandchild whose name is no longer remembered.”
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