New CTEP Inhibitor Drug Improves Alzheimer's Biomarkers by Rescuing Dysfunctional Brain HDL
"In that Broadway trial where you administered obesetrapib, they actually looked at some of the biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease. The phosphorylated P-tau, the amyloid 40/42 ratio. And they saw some very interesting movement in the right direction of those Alzheimer's-associated biomarkers."
About this episode
On this episode of The Drive Podcast, host Dr. Peter Attia conducts an in-depth technical discussion with lipidologist Dr. Tom Dayspring on cholesterol metabolism in the brain and its relationship to Alzheimer's disease. The conversation challenges fundamental misconceptions about brain cholesterol by establishing that the brain's cholesterol system operates completely independently from peripheral blood cholesterol levels. Dayspring explains that ApoB particles carrying most circulating cholesterol cannot cross the blood-brain barrier, and that the brain contains 20 times more cholesterol than the liver despite children having LDL levels as low as 30 mg/dL during peak brain growth. The discussion centers on how the brain uses ApoE-containing lipoproteins rather than ApoB particles for cholesterol transport, and why the ApoE4 genotype creates dysfunctional lipoproteins that cannot properly deliver cholesterol to neurons, triggering beta amyloid and tau production. Dayspring presents evidence from statin meta-analyses showing these drugs cause no brain harm and may reduce Alzheimer's incidence, contradicting widespread fears about cognitive impairment from cholesterol-lowering therapy. The physicians discuss biomarkers like desmosterol and 24S-hydroxycholesterol that can track brain cholesterol synthesis and health through blood tests. They also explore the role of omega-3 fatty acids, ezetimibe's surprising potential brain benefits despite working in the gut, and new evidence that the CTEP inhibitor obesetrapib improves Alzheimer's biomarkers. The episode provides a molecular-level understanding of how cholesterol dysregulation drives neurodegeneration and why aggressive lipid lowering may protect rather than harm the brain.
Key takeaways
- The brain's cholesterol system operates completely independently from blood cholesterol, with ApoB particles unable to cross the blood-brain barrier.
- The brain stores 20 times more cholesterol than the liver and develops normally in children with LDL cholesterol as low as 30 mg/dL.
- ApoE4 genotype creates dysfunctional brain lipoproteins that fail to deliver cholesterol properly, triggering beta amyloid and tau production and increasing Alzheimer's risk 8 to 12-fold.
- Meta-analyses of statin trials show no brain harm and possible Alzheimer's protection, as statins can cross the blood-brain barrier and reduce excess neuronal cholesterol.
- Desmosterol and 24S-hydroxycholesterol are blood biomarkers that can track brain cholesterol synthesis and neurological health.
- The new CTEP inhibitor obesetrapib improved Alzheimer's biomarkers in the BROADWAY trial by increasing ApoA-1 that can rescue dysfunctional brain lipoproteins.
- Omega-3 fatty acids EPA and DHA cross the blood-brain barrier via lysophospholipid transporters and are critical for brain cell membrane health.