Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) announced Friday that it's pulling the plug on its posdinemab trial after the experimental Alzheimer's drug failed to slow cognitive decline in patients with early-stage disease. Not exactly the breakthrough the pharmaceutical giant was hoping for.
The Phase 2b AuTonomy study, which enrolled over 500 participants, took what the company called a "first-of-its-kind precision approach" to tackling early Alzheimer's. After a scheduled review determined that posdinemab didn't achieve statistical significance in slowing clinical decline, Johnson & Johnson decided to discontinue the trial entirely. The company plans to share a full evaluation of the data with the scientific community later.
Here's what makes this particularly noteworthy: posdinemab had earned Fast Track designation from the FDA back in January. That's a designation reserved for drugs addressing serious conditions with potential to fill unmet medical needs. The monoclonal antibody showed promise in targeting disease-associated phosphorylated tau in cerebrospinal fluid from Alzheimer's patients and blocking the development and spread of tau aggregates in preclinical disease models.
Posdinemab was actually the second Fast Track designation J&J received in 2024 for its Alzheimer's portfolio. The company's anti-tau active immunotherapy, JNJ-2056, which targets tau in a preclinical Alzheimer's population, secured Fast Track designation in July 2024. That program is still moving forward.
The bigger picture here is what this means for the wave of next-generation Alzheimer's drugs currently in development. According to STAT News, posdinemab's failure could complicate prospects for similar therapies aiming to improve on current treatment standards. Biogen Inc. (BIIB), UCB SA (UCBJY) (UCBJF), and Voyager Therapeutics Inc. (VYGR) are all advancing comparable programs targeting tau pathology.
And Johnson & Johnson isn't alone in recent Alzheimer's setbacks. On Monday, Novo Nordisk A/S (NVO) released topline results from the two-year primary analysis of its evoke and evoke+ Phase 3 trials in early-stage symptomatic Alzheimer's disease. Those trials didn't confirm superiority of semaglutide versus placebo in reducing progression of Alzheimer's disease, as measured by the Clinical Dementia Rating – Sum of Boxes score compared to baseline.
The consistent theme? Alzheimer's remains one of the toughest therapeutic areas in drug development. Despite significant advances with amyloid-targeting therapies in recent years, finding treatments that meaningfully slow cognitive decline continues to challenge even the largest pharmaceutical companies.
Interestingly, Johnson & Johnson shares were up 0.46% at $206.99 on Tuesday following the announcement, trading at a new 52-week high. The market's muted response suggests investors either anticipated the trial results or view the setback as a relatively small piece of J&J's massive and diversified pharmaceutical portfolio. With the company still advancing JNJ-2056 and other Alzheimer's candidates, this particular failure doesn't appear to have rattled investor confidence in the broader business.