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Home Canadian news feed

What we know about the Alzheimer’s drug Health Canada approved

Sarah Taylor by Sarah Taylor
October 29, 2025
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What we know about the Alzheimer’s drug Health Canada approved
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Health Canada has conditionally approved the drug lecanemab to slow early-stage Alzheimer’s disease, raising questions about its effectiveness and availability in Canada.

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Lecanemab is a lab-made antibody given by intravenous infusion. It targets the buildup of amyloid plaque in the brain, a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease.

Lecanemab is not a cure and cannot reverse the disease or restore lost memories.

The Alzheimer Society of Canada calls it the first disease-modifying Alzheimer’s treatment approved for use in the country. Current medications mitigate symptoms rather than change the course of the disease. 

How well the drug works and its potential impact on Canada’s health-care systems are now considerations for people with the disease, their families, physicians and governments. 

Lecanemab, also known by the brand name Leqembi, is approved to treat mild cognitive impairment and early stages of Alzheimer’s disease.

Patients must have a documented presence of amyloid plaque in the brain, Canada’s Drug Agency said. 

Patients must also seek testing for gene variants associated with negative side-effects. The new treatment is only available for patients with a single or no copy of a gene variant called APOE4. Patients with two APOE4 copies are more likely to experience swelling or bleeding in the brain.

Access to the required genetic testing varies across provinces and territories.

When someone is diagnosed with dementia, a common fear is losing the ability to stay independent, said Dr. Samir Sinha, a geriatrician and clinician scientist at Sinai Health and the University Health Network in Toronto.

“Right now, it takes about 18 months before you might notice some sort of significant difference,” Sinha said.

It’s estimated 750,000 Canadians live with dementia and about 500,000 of them have a diagnosis, said Sinha. By the time a lot of people receive a formal diagnosis, they may no longer be good candidates for this medication, he said.

Sinha said he thinks more research is needed to answer whether lecanemab’s benefits are worth the $26,000 US it costs in other countries. He questioned whether the results would be noticeable enough to allow patients to stay independent.

“It’s a positive development that there’s another medication that’s been approved and it’s available, but it’s not necessarily a medication that would be the most practical one for me to prescribe or recommend for the majority of my patients.”

Advocates call for more support for young caregivers taking care of aging family members

While there’s no one diagnostic test for Alzheimer’s, to confirm eligibility for this medication, people first need specialized diagnostics like a lumbar puncture or amyloid PET scan.

The infusions are given every two weeks through an IV, with each session taking about an hour. In the U.S., infusions are given at hospitals and infusion therapy centres.

Anyone taking the drug needs ongoing monitoring, typically  with PET scans or MRIs, to ensure safety and effectiveness.

“Meeting these demands will require substantial investments in human resources, infrastructure, training, and the creation of new health-care pathways to deliver such treatments effectively and equitably,” the Alzheimer’s Society said. 

The Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration in Aging outlined side-effects that came up in clinical trials, such as brain swelling or bleeding for two antibody treatments including lecanemab.

The society urged Canada’s Drug Agency and provincial governments to quickly bring the drug to market and publicly fund it so all eligible patients can afford to take it, noting it costs about $26,000 US a year in other countries.

It can take up to two years after regulatory approval for new medicines to become publicly covered. Private or extended benefits may offer access sooner. 

In 2024, Britain’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) concluded the benefits of lecanemab are too small to justify the cost to the publicly-funded health system of providing the treatment, including giving the medication and monitoring for side-effects.

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