-
In the year 1901,
-
a woman called Auguste was
taken to a medical asylum in Frankfurt.
-
Auguste was delusional
-
and couldn't remember
even the most basic details of her life.
-
Her doctor was called Alois.
-
Alois didn't know how to help Auguste,
-
but he watched over her until,
sadly, she passed away in 1906.
-
After she died, Alois performed an autopsy
-
and found strange plaques
and tangles in Auguste's brain --
-
the likes of which he'd never seen before.
-
Now here's the even more striking thing.
-
If Auguste had instead been alive today,
-
we could offer her no more help
than Alois was able to 114 years ago.
-
Alois was Dr. Alois Alzheimer.
-
And Auguste Deter
-
was the first patient to be diagnosed with
what we now call Alzheimer's disease.
-
Since 1901, medicine has advanced greatly.
-
We've discovered antibiotics and vaccines
to protect us from infections,
-
many treatments for cancer,
antiretrovirals for HIV,
-
statins for heart disease
and much more.
-
But, we've made essentially no progress
at all in treating Alzheimer's disease.
-
I'm part of a team of scientists
-
who has been working to find
a cure for Alzheimer's for over a decade.
-
So I think about this all the time.
-
Alzheimer's now affects
40 million people worldwide.
-
But by 2050, it will affect
150 million people --
-
which, by the way,
will include many of you.
-
If you're hoping
to live to be 85 or older,
-
your chance of getting Alzheimer's
will be almost one in two.
-
In other words, odds are
you'll spend your golden years
-
either suffering from Alzheimer's
-
or helping to look after a friend
or loved one with Alzheimer's.
-
Already in the United States alone,
-
Alzheimer's care costs
$200 billion every year.
-
One out of every five
Medicare dollars get spent on Alzheimer's.
-
It is today the most expensive disease,
-
and costs are projected
to increase five-fold by 2050,
-
as the Baby Boomer generation ages.
-
It may surprise you that, put simply,
-
Alzheimer's is one of the biggest medical
and social challenges of our generation.
-
But we've done relatively
little to address it.
-
Today, of the top 10
causes of death worldwide,
-
Alzheimer's is the only one
we cannot prevent, cure or even slow down.
-
We understand less about the science
of Alzheimer's than other diseases
-
because we've invested less time
and money into researching it.
-
The US government
spends 10 times more every year
-
on cancer research than on Alzheimer's
-
despite the fact that
Alzheimer's costs us more
-
and causes a similar number
of deaths each year as cancer.
-
The lack of resources stems
from a more fundamental cause:
-
a lack of awareness.
-
Because here's what few people know
but everyone should:
-
Alzheimer's is a disease,
and we can cure it.
-
For most of the past 114 years,
-
everyone, including scientists, mistakenly
confused Alzheimer's with aging.
-
We thought that becoming senile was a
normal and inevitable part of getting old.
-
But we only have to look at a picture
-
of a healthy aged brain compared
to the brain of an Alzheimer's patient
-
to see the real physical damage
caused by this disease.
-
As well as triggering severe loss
of memory and mental abilities,
-
the damage to the brain
caused by Alzheimer's
-
significantly reduces life expectancy
and is always fatal.
-
Remember Dr. Alzheimer found
strange plaques and tangles
-
in Auguste's brain a century ago.
-
For almost a century,
we didn't know much about these.
-
Today we know they're made
from protein molecules.
-
You can imagine a protein molecule
-
as a piece of paper that normally folds
into an elaborate piece of origami.
-
There are spots
on the paper that are sticky.
-
And when it folds correctly,
these sticky bits end up on the inside.
-
But sometimes things go wrong,
and some sticky bits are on the outside.
-
This causes the protein molecules
to stick to each other,
-
forming clumps that eventually become
larges plaques and tangles.
-
That's what we see
in the brains of Alzheimer's patients.
-
We've spent the past 10 years
at the University of Cambridge
-
trying to understand
how this malfunction works.
-
There are many steps, and identifying
which step to try to block is complex --
-
like defusing a bomb.
-
Cutting one wire might do nothing.
-
Cutting others might
make the bomb explore.
-
We have to find the right step to block,
-
and then create a drug that does it.
-
Until recently, we for the most part
-
have been cutting wires
and hoping for the best.
-
But now we've got together
a diverse group of people --
-
medics, biologists, geneticists, chemists,
physicists, engineers and mathematicians.
-
And together, we've managed to identify
a critical step in the process
-
and are now testing a new class of drugs
which would specifically block this step
-
and stop the disease.
-
Now let me show you
some of our latest results.
-
No one outside of our lab
has seen these yet.
-
Let's look at some videos of what happened
when we tested these new drugs in worms.
-
So these are healthy worms,
-
and you can see
they're moving around normally.
-
These worms, on the other hand,
-
have protein molecules
sticking together inside them --
-
like humans with Alzheimer's.
-
And you can see they're clearly sick.
-
But if we give our new drugs
to these worms at an early stage,
-
then we see that they're healthy,
and they live a normal lifespan.
-
This is just an initial positive result,
but research like this
-
shows us that Alzheimer's is a disease
that we can understand and we can cure.
-
After 114 years of waiting, there's
finally real hope for what can be achieved
-
in the next 10 or 20 years.
-
But to grow that hope,
to finally beat Alzheimer's, we need help.
-
This isn't about scientists like me --
it's about you.
-
We need you to raise awareness
that Alzheimer's is a disease
-
and that if we try, we can beat it.
-
In the case of other diseases,
-
patients and their families
have led the charge for more research
-
and put pressure on governments,
the pharmaceutical industry,
-
scientists and regulators.
-
That was essential for advancing treatment
for HIV in the late 1980s.
-
Today, we see that
same drive to beat cancer.
-
But Alzheimer's patients are often
unable to speak up for themselves.
-
And their families, the hidden victims,
caring for their loved ones night and day,
-
are often too worn out
to go out and advocate for change.
-
So, it really is down to you.
-
Alzheimer's isn't, for the most part,
a genetic disease.
-
Everyone with a brain is at risk.
-
Today, there are 40 million
patients like Auguste,
-
who can't create the change
they need for themselves.
-
Help speak up for them,
and help demand a cure.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)
chac_eli
There's a mistake at 05:00, which is "explore", and the right word is "explode"