Alzheimer’s can spread between humans, a groundbreaking study revealed today. Experts have found evidence of at least five people ‘catching’ the memory-robbing disorder from now-banned hormone treatments.

The patients were among 1,848 people injected with growth hormones riddled with toxic amyloid-beta protein ‘seeds’, or prions, as children.

All five came down with the same rare early-onset form of the devastating dementia condition. Others who received the same treatment are now considered ‘at risk’.


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Between 1958 and 1985, abnormally short children in the UK and the US were given hormones harvested from cadavers to help spur their growth.

Five patients were among 1,848 injected with growth hormones infected with toxic amyloid-beta protein 'seeds' as children. All five came down with the same rare early-onset form of the devastating dementia condition. Others who received the same treatment are now considered 'at risk'

The technique was then banned and doctors instead used synthetic hormones after it emerged that some batches were contaminated with prions that led to a fatal and incurable brain disorder called Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). CJD itself is closely related to ‘mad cow’ disease.

Academics now believe other medical and surgical procedures might carry a risk of spreading Alzheimer’s as prions — which accumulate in the brain and kill neurons —can survive hospital sterilization methods.

As prions accumulate in the brain, the NHS says plaque deposits may appear in the brain. Abnormal build-ups of proteins in and around neurons is thought to be what causes Alzheimer’s.

Professor John Collinge, of University College London, said action must be taken to prevent accidental transmission in the future.

He said: ‘These patients were given a specific and long-discontinued medical treatment which involved injecting them with material now known to have been contaminated with disease-related proteins.

‘We are now planning to look at ways of destroying prions from surgical equipment, as they can resist normal decontamination methods.’

Alzheimer’s was previously believed to come in two forms — a ‘sporadic’ variant suffered by thousands of people over the age of 65, which is by far the most common, and a genetic early-onset type that runs in families.

The UCL scientists say they have now identified a third variant, which is slightly different from the others and very rare, which can be passed from one person to another. Batches of the infected growth hormone were stored in a Department of Health archive as a dried powder.

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