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Tau Targeting Breakthroughs Promise New Era in Alzheimer’s Therapy
Health & Longevity

Tau Targeting Breakthroughs Promise New Era in Alzheimer’s Therapy

Photography & Words by Dr. Silas Mercer July 15, 2026 2 MIN READ
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At the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in London, researchers unveiled a suite of findings that place tau targeting at the forefront of the next wave of Alzheimer’s interventions. After decades of amyloid‑centric drug development, the spotlight is shifting to the tangled protein that appears alongside memory loss. A Biogen‑run Phase II trial of diranersen, an antisense oligonucleotide that silences tau production, reported a dramatic ↑ 60% drop in brain‑wide tau deposits measured by PET after 18 months. Participants also experienced a ↑ 50% slowdown in cognitive decline on standard test batteries.

Why Tau Targeting Matters

Unlike amyloid plaques that sit outside neurons, tau aggregates inside cells, making it harder to reach with conventional antibodies. The gene‑silencing approach used by diranersen binds to the messenger RNA that instructs cells to build tau, effectively cutting production at the source.

“This is the first trial to ever show reduction in tau and a clear clinical signal,” said Dr. Lawren VandeVrede, UCSF neurologist, emphasizing the potential of a dual‑therapy strategy.

Other speakers highlighted a blood‑based assay for phosphorylated tau (p‑tau217) that can flag risk up to a decade before symptoms. In a study of 2,700 cognitively normal adults, the highest p‑tau217 levels corresponded to a 78% greater chance of impairment within ten years, outperforming MRI and genetic screening (Reuters).

Clinicians hope to pair anti‑tau drugs with existing anti‑amyloid agents, which currently curb decline by roughly 30% (Bloomberg). If both pathways are dampened, patients could approach functional stabilization—a milestone many have called unattainable.

Policy analysts warn that widespread screening will clash with current reimbursement rules, as Medicare still deems routine tau testing investigational. Advocacy groups are lobbying for coverage once larger trials confirm benefit.


Words by Dr. Silas Mercer (Biotech & Longevity Editor).

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