

JAMA. 2025;334(6):513–525.

Toups K, Hathaway A, Gordon D, et al. Precision Medicine Approach to Alzheimer's Disease: Successful Pilot Project. J Alzheimers Dis. 2022;88(4):1411-1421. doi:10.3233/JAD-215707
Instead of using just one drug or treatment for everyone, this study tested a personalized medical plan—a “precision medicine” approach—for people with mild memory problems or early dementia due to Alzheimer’s. Each person was tested for different health factors that might affect their memory—such as inflammation, infections, poor blood sugar control, hormone issues, nutrient deficiencies, and toxin exposures—and then received a tailored treatment plan addressing those issues
What were the benefits and risks?
Thinking and memory scores improved: Tests like the MoCA, the CNS Vital Signs test, and the Alzheimer’s Questionnaire showed statistically significant improvement.

This means that looking at and treating each person's unique health issues—not just Alzheimer’s symptoms—might help slow cognitive decline or even improve thinking.
The researchers found that by looking at each person's overall health and treating problems like inflammation, poor blood sugar control, or nutrient shortages, participants often thought a bit better after nine months—and their brain scans even looked healthier. Importantly, no one had serious harm. It’s early, but it gives hope that a tailored treatment plan—rather than a one-size-fits-all pill—might work better for some people with early Alzheimer’s.
Ornish, D., Madison, C., Kivipelto, M. et al. Effects of intensive lifestyle changes on the progression of mild cognitive impairment or early dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease: a randomized, controlled clinical trial. Alz Res Therapy 16, 122 (2024).
Doctors wanted to see if making very healthy lifestyle changes could help people with mild memory problems or early Alzheimer’s disease. They compared two groups:

A Few Important Things to Know
Study size was small (51 people), which limits how broadly we can apply the results.
Blinding was not possible—participants knew if they were making lifestyle changes, which could affect outcomes.
Short duration (20 weeks). Longer studies are needed to see if the benefits last.
Not everyone improved. In the lifestyle group: some improved, some stayed the same, some worsened. A big reason seemed to be how well they followed the program.
Many participants showed signs of improvement—or at least slowed decline—in memory and functioning after just 20 weeks of lifestyle changes.
Biological changes supported these improvements, lending strength to the results.
Ross MK, Raji C, Lokken KL, et al. Case Study: A Precision Medicine Approach to Multifactorial Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease. J Alzheimers Dis Parkinsonism. 2021;11(Suppl 5):018.
This report tells the story of one person with mixed dementia (Alzheimer’s plus other possible causes of memory loss) who was treated using a personalized, multi-part medical plan. Instead of using a single medication, doctors looked at many possible factors that might affect thinking and memory—and addressed each one carefully.
Participants showed sustained improvement in several areas:
