Revolutionary new treatments to slow cognitive decline will require doctors and patients to think about quality of life in new ways.

A patient Iāll call Robert began a recent visit to the Penn Memory Center with a pithy, direct request: āAs soon as possible, I want to start one of those Alzheimerās disease treatments.ā
In 20-plus years of practice, Iād never had a visit begin with these words. When I first diagnosed Robert with Alzheimerās disease a year ago, our conversation about treatment was limited to drugs that might enhance his cognitive and day-to-day functional abilities. Their risks were minimal, but so were their benefits. But on July 6, the FDA approved lecanemab, sold by Eisai and Biogen under the brand name Leqembi, for the treatment of Alzheimerās disease. By yearās end itās on track to approve another drug, donanemab, being developed by Eli Lilly.
As I explained to Robert and his wife, these new drugs are quite different. In tests involving patients in the two early stages of Alzheimerāsāmild cognitive impairment and mild stage dementiaāboth medicines reduced beta-amyloid build-up in the brain, one of the pathologies that cause the disease, and slowed the pace of decline in cognitive and functional abilities. The new drugs canāt cure Alzheimerās, but they could offer patients more time in these stages before they transition to moderate stage dementia.
Robert is currently in the mild cognitive impairment stage. He has subtle but noticeable problems that cause inefficiencies in lifeās daily activities. Right now, for instance, he struggles to work through financial matters and makes a few mistakes along the way, but heās able to catch them. When his cognitive impairments get worse and his wife has to take over activities he once performed, his diagnosis will change to mild stage dementia.
A year and a half of treatment with the new Alzheimerās drugs has been shown to reduce the chance of progression to mild stage dementia by about 10%. This benefit comes with notable risks, including small patches of brain bleeding and swelling, which can cause falls and confusion and may require stopping the drug. And there are other barriers. The new Alzheimerās therapies are very expensiveāone year of lecanemab therapy is priced at $26,500. They are difficult to deliver, require an extensive work-up to determine eligibility and involve intensive monitoring for side effects. As many as 8 million Americans are estimated to be living with mild cognitive impairment, but only about 8% to 17.4% will meet all the criteria to take one of these drugs, according to a study published last month in the journal Neurology.
As Robert, his wife and I talked about these medicines, something very interesting happened. After objectively weighing the risks and benefits, we began to discuss an intensely personal and subjective question: Does he want to live longer with Alzheimerās disease?
This question is ethically challenging. Alzheimerās, like cancer and heart disease, is a chronic, progressive and potentially terminal disease. In talking to patients with such diseases, contemporary medical ethics tells doctors to help them reflect on the quality of life they want. But the more I talk to people like Robert and his wife, the more Iām convinced that this approach isnāt sufficient.
Usually, patients and doctors donāt start talking about the value of living longer until the progression of chronic disease triggers a discussion. But I canāt rely on that approach with patients like Robert, since as his dementia worsens, heāll experience increasing problems with attention, concentration, memory, speech and writing. In time, he wonāt be able to rely on himself to direct his own care.
For now, though, heās able to, and that is why I asked him a question Iāve begun to incorporate into my clinical practice: āIs there a point later on when youād want to stop treatment?ā
He nodded yes and talked about how he enjoys walking around Philadelphia and volunteering with a not-for-profit organization. He knows in time he wonāt be able to do those activities, and thatās when he wants to stop treatment. Then words began to fail him. In phrases that were more fragments than sentences, he mentioned diapers, trouble eating, living in a nursing home, not recognizing people. āBeing a vegetable. You know,ā he insisted. āNo quality of life.ā

ET scans show the effects of Alzheimerās disease on the brain. Credit: SCIENCE SOURCE
Like many patients, Robert defined his quality of life by his ability to care for himself, in terms of eating, dressing and using the toilet. I understand why. āIāll never send him to an adult daycare,ā āIād rather die than live in a nursing homeāāthese pronouncements are all too common, emotionally charged reactions to Americaās disorganized, underfunded and understaffed system of dementia care. But this system can be improved, if we muster the political will.
What Robert was most worried about was losing the behaviors that define who he is. Heās worried about how damage to his brain will damage his mind. The phrase ābeing a vegetableā is a good example of our impoverished vocabulary for talking about how dementia transforms the mind. Our culture is polluted with words and phrases like āvegetable,ā āzombieā and āsecond childhood.ā As patients and their families take up the question of whether to live longer with Alzheimerās disease, they need better ways of thinking about how Alzheimerās is a disease of the mindāand I think we can do this without turning dementia care into a philosophy seminar.
Some creatures have a mind. Some donāt. A squash flower moves toward light, but most botanists would agree that it doesnāt desire to face the warm sun or experience joy and delight in moving. Human beings do. An amoeba moves toward sugar but doesnāt feel the same pleasure a person does when she reaches for something sweet on a dessert tray. When our memory combines these experiences into a meaningful stream, it creates the feeling of being ourselves.
The human mind isnāt simply the product of the brain but of a system that couples together brain and environment, called the āextended mind.ā All of us use smartphones, notepads and other people to keep our minds functioning, and so to be ourselves. The more Alzheimerās damages a personās brain, the more of these extensions they require to maintain their mind. As Robert develops problems with spatial memory, for instance, his smartphone can guide him home on his walks around Philadelphia. He may require the assistance of his wife or an aide to continue volunteering. With these accommodations, his feeling of what it is like to be himself may be largely unaffected.
When I explain the new Alzheimerās drugs to patients and caregivers, I reiterate that one of the most effective treatments is the presence of another human being. Caregiving is more than housekeeping; it means perceiving the mind of the person living with dementia and supporting it. I find explaining this coupled system to patients and caregivers helps them understand how Alzheimerās affects both of themāwhat I call āthe feeling of being us.ā In some sense they both have Alzheimerās disease. The decision whether to slow this disease is truly an interdependent decision.
Robert reflected on the role of his wife in the decision whether to stop treatment: āI guess sheāll decide.ā One factor that will guide her is her perception of his mind, her answer to the question āWhat is it like to be Robert?ā āFor now,ā she reflected, āRobert is Robert.ā He agrees.
The wife of another patient, who Iāll call Walter, answered differently. Her husband often confuses her with other people: āI think sometimes heās scared, maybe in denial,ā she said. But she went on to explain that she still sees his joy at concerts and dance performances. As long as he has this ability, she wants him to receive one of the new treatments. Her desire shows how, despite disabilities and distortions of reality, caregivers and patients can find connection and meaning. It also shows how the arts can help achieve this.
In time, for some patients and caregivers, the feeling of ābeing usā dissipates. The patientās mind becomes hard to perceive, and the scaffolding that supports it becomes exhausting to maintain. āSheās a thousand times worseā was one daughterās summing up of her motherās severe stage dementia. The reason wasnāt just losses in function or cognition but in her motherās capacity to joke and laugh in that way that was āso totally her.ā In the following months, the daughter enrolled her in hospice care.
Todayās revolution in Alzheimerās treatment needs a revolution in culture, changing the conversation from quality of life to quality of mind. Doctors need to ask patients āWhat it is like to be you,ā and foster support with people, activities and technologies that create connection and meaning. If we do this, weāll be better equipped to make the difficult decisions about whether to start or to stop treatment.
Jason Karlawish is a physician, co-director of the Penn Memory Center and the author of āThe Problem of Alzheimerās: How Science, Culture and Politics Turned a Rare Disease into a Crisis and What We Can Do About It.ā






