Top of page
Health

Volunteer register for new trials to prevent Alzheimer’s in Australia

Senior with Alzheimer`s has difficulty playing puzzle

The Australian Dementia Network (ADNeT) has launched a new dementia prevention and treatment trial volunteer register as Australia prepares to join trials to treat Alzheimer’s disease before symptoms emerge.

University of Melbourne Professor, ADNeT Director and leading dementia neuroscientist Christopher Rowe, said until now Australia had experienced difficulties recruiting participants for dementia trials.

“Slow recruitment delays the development of treatments that are urgently needed to tackle the dementia epidemic,” Professor Rowe said.

“Dementia is Australia’s second leading cause of death and the greatest cause of disability in Australians aged 65 and over. An estimated 500,000 Australians are living with dementia and care for them costs the nation $15 billion per year.”

ADNeT’s volunteer register and screening program was developed to attract and screen participants for treatment trials to reduce the recruitment time and boost the number of trials and participants in Australia.

“This will help us get effective treatments sooner,” Professor Rowe said.

This approach has proven a winner, with news that new dementia prevention and treatment trials involving Australia will begin recruitment soon.

Despite some controversy it has long been thought that the accumulation in the brain of the protein beta amyloid in the form of plaques is a leading cause of Alzheimer’s disease, which is the main cause of dementia in Australia.

“Amyloid plaques slowly build up in the brain over many years before damage occurs and signs of dementia such as memory loss and confusion appear,” Professor Rowe said.

“This gives us the opportunity to use a brain scan to detect these plaques in the brain and identify people at risk of dementia from Alzheimer’s disease before any symptoms have appeared.”

Professor Rowe said there are now four anti-amyloid antibody drugs from four different companies at different stages of trials that have been proven to dramatically clear plaques from people with Alzheimer’s disease. These antibody drugs attack the plaques and stimulate the patient’s own immune system to remove the plaques.

“So far, these drugs have only been given to patients with mild dementia and in most studies, these drugs have slowed the worsening of the dementia,” he said.

“This is very encouraging but greater benefit would come from preventing or delaying the onset of dementia, so we need to give these treatments earlier.”

ADNeT is now looking for volunteers over the age of 55 with normal memory function who are concerned about their dementia risk. Participants will be tested for amyloid plaques. If plaques are present, they will be given the opportunity to participate in clinical trials to see if removing the plaques before symptoms have developed can delay or stop the development of Alzheimer’s disease.

You might also like

A speaker at Rare Disease Day 2026 at the UNM Center for Development & Disability. A speaker at Rare Disease Day 2026 at the UNM Center for Development & Disability.

Rare disease community unites for advocacy at UNM health sciences event

You could hear the confidence in their voices. Sometimes it…

wheelchair user at the hospital wheelchair user at the hospital

ACP papers call for accessible, inclusive health care

Two new papers from the American College of Physicians (ACP)…

Laura Rice, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign professor of health and kinesiology Laura Rice, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign professor of health and kinesiology

How can someone prevent or prepare for falls?

Falls are the leading cause of injury for adults aged…

Senior woman lies in bed and reads a book Senior woman lies in bed and reads a book

Targeted action to deliver more aged care beds

The Australian Government is delivering more aged care beds where…