How the Alzheimer's Research Scandal Set Back Treatment 16 Years

What is the Alzheimer's research scandal? Learn what neuroscientist Matthew Schrag has to say about possible fraudulent Alzheimer's research from a 2006 study.

By Emilie Le Beau Lucchesi
Oct 11, 2022 3:30 PMAug 3, 2023 6:32 PM
Alzheimer's Disease
(Credit:Atthapon Raksthaput/Shutterstock)

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In 2006, a landmark study in Nature identified a possible cause of Alzheimer’s disease. For almost 16 years, this study influenced how scientists approached Alzheimer’s and how major research grants were given.

But in the summer of 2022, the editors of Nature issued a chilling disclaimer. There was concern regarding the images that accompanied the article. An investigation was underway, and readers were urged to “use caution” when relying on the results.

A whistleblower had come forward and said the images appeared to have been manipulated, meaning the results that guided scientists were possibly wrong.

In the U.S., Alzheimer’s now afflicts more than six million people aged 65 and older. If the accusations are true, it’s possible that inaccurate research was influencing significant research time and money to help these patients.

2006 Alzheimer's Study

The study at the center of the controversy was published in 2006 in Nature and co-authored by eight researchers from the University of Minnesota, John Hopkins University and the University of California-Irvine.

The study examined cognitive decline in mice, and the authors identified an amyloid-β precursor protein as the possible cause of cognitive decline. The amyloid hypothesis suggested that the damage could be limited if the protein could be managed.

The amyloid hypothesis came at a time of frustration for Alzheimer’s researchers. Since the German physician Alois Alzheimer first began publishing on the disease in the early 1900s, scientists have wanted to know what caused this profound cognitive decline. Alzheimer first suggested that the “senile plagues” he identified during autopsies were important.   

The idea held until the late 1990s and early 2000s when one failed clinical trial after the next prompted researchers to reform their hypotheses. The 2006 study in Nature gave many scientists the greenlight they wanted to pursue the amyloid hypothesis as the possible cause.


Read More: How Did Alzheimer's Disease Get Its Name?


Simufilam Controversy

In the next 16 years, the National Institute of Health prioritized research grants for scientists following the amyloid hypothesis. They also approved an experimental drug — Simufilam — which the manufacturer says would “stabilize a critical protein in the brain.”

Based on data from a slew of journal articles, Simufilam was supposed to stabilize the proteins and stop the cascade of damage that led to cognitive decline.

And in 2021, a critic of the drug sounded an alarm that shook the entire field of research. The whistleblower, Matthew Schrag, a neuroscientist and physician in Tennessee, announced the data from the 2006 Nature article might be fraudulent, and it was time to rethink the amyloid hypothesis. 


Read More: A Personal Glimpse at Living With Early-Onset Alzheimer's


Alzheimer’s Research Scandal

The problem with the 2006 Nature article is in the pictures. Schrag and other scientists have scrutinized the images that accompanied the article and said there is evidence of tampering.

“I think there are huge red flags on that data that make you seriously question that data,” Schrag says. “What we can see is that there are areas in that image where there looks like patches have been copied and pasted and described as different experiments. That’s occurring in a wide enough range of places to undermine the interpretation of the entire article.”

Schrag alerted the National Institute of Health, which granted the lead author millions in research funding, and the University of Minnesota, where the lead author is on the faculty and has a research laboratory.

The investigation could take years. In the meantime, other investigations, including a 2022 article in Science, are supporting Schrag’s findings. Members of the research community are considering the possibility the photos were manipulated, the data is skewed and research has been heading in the wrong direction for a long time. 


Read More: Could Beer Hops Help Prevent the Onset of Alzheimer’s Disease?


Impact of Fraudulent Alzheimer’s Study

The 2006 Nature article pushed scientists in the wrong direction, but Schrag says it’s not entirely to blame. Many other researchers were willing to go along with the amyloid hypothesis.

“No major hypothesis hinges on just one study,” Schrag says.

While the research community focused on the amyloid hypothesis, other ideas have been ignored or denied funding. This controversy can stop other research fields from making the same mistake.

“I hope this is the takeaway,” Schrag says. “It’s not the best strategy for a field [of researchers to] tunnel vision on one idea. I’d like to see a wider range of funding to support competing funding.”


Read More: There's a New FDA-Approved Drug to Treat Alzheimer's

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