GENUS Therapy Shows Promise in Slowing Alzheimer's Progression, Study Finds

October 27, 2025
GENUS Therapy Shows Promise in Slowing Alzheimer's Progression, Study Finds
  • Recent research indicates that daily 40Hz audiovisual stimulation, known as GENUS, is safe and feasible for individuals with late-onset Alzheimer's, with promising signs it may slow cognitive decline and reduce disease biomarkers, warranting larger trials.

  • The long-term study supports GENUS's potential to impact Alzheimer's progression positively, especially in late-onset cases, by possibly slowing disease progression and lowering biomarkers.

  • This noninvasive therapy, which involves light and sound stimulation, has shown biological effects such as decreasing tau proteins linked to Alzheimer's pathology, and it is safe for at-home use.

  • In a small sample, three female late-onset Alzheimer's patients experienced cognitive benefits and increased brain responsiveness, whereas two male early-onset patients did not show significant improvements, suggesting differences based on disease onset age.

  • The study highlights that late-onset female patients showed notable improvements, including slower decline and enhanced brain activity, compared to untreated controls, while early-onset patients did not benefit as much.

  • Researchers are exploring whether GENUS could have preventative effects in at-risk individuals, especially those with a family history of Alzheimer’s, before symptoms appear.

  • The therapy was well tolerated, safe, and suitable for at-home use, with no adverse effects reported, and findings suggest it may have meaningful biological impacts on Alzheimer’s pathology.

  • Blood tests from late-onset patients revealed significant reductions in tau proteins, including pTau217, which are strongly associated with Alzheimer’s, indicating potential biological benefits of the treatment.

  • Participants with late-onset Alzheimer’s maintained higher cognitive scores, improved sleep, and showed decreased plasma tau biomarkers after two years of daily GENUS therapy.

  • A two-year, small-scale study involving five volunteers with mild Alzheimer’s demonstrated that 40Hz sensory stimulation is safe and feasible, with potential cognitive and biological benefits.

  • This research, conducted by MIT’s Picower Institute and funded by various foundations, is part of ongoing efforts to evaluate GENUS as both a preventive and therapeutic intervention for Alzheimer’s.

  • GENUS works by synchronizing brain activity to a 40Hz gamma rhythm, which has been shown in animal models and early studies to preserve neurons, reduce amyloid and tau proteins, and improve learning and memory.

Summary based on 3 sources


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