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Listening to music can reduce dementia risk, study reveals

Listening to music into old age could reduce the risk of dementia by almost 40 per cent, a new study has found.
It’s based on data from 10,893 Australians aged 70 or older who, at recruitment, were living in retirement communities and had no dementia diagnosis. They were asked about music listening habits and whether they played an instrument.
People who “always” listened to music (as opposed to never, rarely or sometimes) were 39 per cent less likely to develop dementia after at least three years of follow-up.
These regular listeners were also 17 per cent less likely to develop milder cognitive impairments — problems with memory, thinking and decision-making — and performed better on tests of general cognition and episodic memory (recalling everyday events such as where the car was parked or what was eaten for breakfast).
The research was led by Monash University in Australia.
Those who regularly played an instrument were 35 per cent less likely to develop dementia, but — unlike in some other studies — showed no significant improvement for other cognitive impairments.
People who both listened to and played music had a 33 per cent reduced dementia risk, and a 22 per cent reduced risk for unrelated cognitive impairments. Education level appeared to influence the effect.
The authors noted: “Music engagement benefits were strongest in those with higher education (16+ years) but showed inconsistent results in the middle education group (12–15 years).”
Public health researcher Emma Jaffa, the paper’s lead author at Monash University, said these results suggest “music activities may be an accessible strategy for maintaining cognitive health in older adults, though causation cannot be established.”
While researchers cannot confirm whether listening to music definitively staves off dementia, hearing loss is a known risk factor and studies show hearing aids can reduce cognitive decline.
“Listening to music activates a whole range of regions across your brain,” Monash University neuropsychiatric epidemiologist and senior author Joanne Ryan said in a radio interview, “and so that’s really giving you that cognitive stimulation, which is beneficial to help reduce your risk of dementia.”
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French biotech raises €12m for osteoarthritis trial

A French biotech has raised €12m to test whether GLP-1 drugs can modify osteoarthritis progression.
The funding will advance 4Moving Biotech’s lead programme, 4P004, toward a phase 2a proof-of-concept readout in knee osteoarthritis, a joint disease that causes pain and stiffness.
Despite affecting more than 600 million people worldwide, no therapy approved in Europe or the US has yet been shown to slow or modify disease progression in osteoarthritis.
4Moving Biotech is testing whether GLP-1 receptor agonists, drugs best known for diabetes and obesity, can succeed where others have fallen short.
“With this closing in place, we are well equipped to reach the next value-creation milestone by delivering robust phase 2a data and reaching a proof-of-concept inflection point,” said Luc Boblet, chief executive of 4Moving Biotech.
Rather than systemic administration, the company is testing whether GLP-1 biology can be made relevant to osteoarthritis by acting directly in the joint, targeting local inflammation and tissue responses that systemic approaches have repeatedly failed to address.
“By acting directly in the joint, 4P004 tackles pain, inflammation and tissue damage through GLP-1-mediated pathways,” said professor Francis Berenbaum, the company’s chief medical officer.
The study is designed to assess “dual efficacy: symptom relief and synovial health improvement via contrast-enhanced MRI,” which images the joint lining, with topline results expected in the second half of 2026.
The round was secured from private investors and family offices investing directly into 4Moving Biotech, a subsidiary of 4P-Pharma, and combines equity with loans, a structure the company says is aligned with long-term value creation.
It follows a €7.6m France 2030 i-Démo grant awarded last year and coincides with the transatlantic expansion of the INFLAM-MOTION phase 2a study to the US.
Founded in 2020 as a spin-off from 4P-Pharma, 4Moving Biotech has now raised around €30m in total, combining private capital with non-dilutive public funding.
The broader landscape for disease-modifying osteoarthritis drugs offers little room for overconfidence.
A 2025 review of phase two and three osteoarthritis trials found that while “many DMOADs have progressed to clinical trials, very few have made a significant impact and none have been approved for clinical use.
Reviewing eleven candidates tested between 2010 and 2024, including small molecules, biologics and cell or gene-based therapies, authors conclude that failure has been driven less by any single mechanism than by the difficulty of demonstrating truly disease-modifying benefit.
Several programmes reported statistically significant effects on either pain or joint structure, but rarely both.
The review notes that “the clinical relevance of a marginal increase in one without the other remains unclear,” warning that structural effects without symptom relief may be clinically meaningless, while pain relief without structural protection could even accelerate disease progression.
Over the past decade, major programmes at Pfizer, Eli Lilly, AbbVie, GlaxoSmithKline and Sanofi have been discontinued or deprioritised after failing to deliver regulator-acceptable evidence of disease modification.
In 2020, Unity Biotechnology reported phase two data showing that its senolytic candidate UBX0101, developed as a disease-modifying therapy for knee osteoarthritis, failed to deliver clinically meaningful improvements in pain or joint structure.
Unity subsequently discontinued its osteoarthritis programme, exited the field entirely and ceased operations in 2025.
The phase 2a readout will be the point at which the GLP-1 approach in osteoarthritis either earns its next chapter or joins a long list of programmes that fell short.
News
Test predicts dementia risk years earlier

An EEG test can identify dementia risk five to seven years before progression to mild cognitive impairment or Alzheimer’s dementia, new research suggests.
Using EEG data, which measures the brain’s electrical activity, from older adults with only subjective memory concerns, the longitudinal study found this non-invasive test can flag functional changes long before standard tools detect disease.
Researchers collected baseline resting EEG recordings from 88 older adults who had subjective cognitive impairment (self-reported decline without a clinical diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment, early memory problems or dementia).
The study was conducted by BrainScope, a commercial-stage neurotechnology company in Maryland, US, which applies artificial intelligence and computational neuroscience to brain electrical signals.
Participants then received annual clinical assessments and staging of cognitive decline. Over time, some progressed to mild cognitive impairment or dementia, while others remained cognitively normal.
Using BrainScope’s proprietary EEG-based biomarker platform, researchers identified distinct brain-activity patterns at the initial visit that accurately predicted future decline.
BrainScope’s EEG biomarker achieved an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.90, a measure of diagnostic accuracy, and performance was validated across independent international cohorts.
The findings suggest that with BrainScope’s signal processing and AI-enabled analytics, EEG could serve as a rapid, affordable and non-invasive assessment to identify Alzheimer’s-related brain dysfunction years before meaningful memory loss.
Early identification matters because by the time traditional imaging detects Alzheimer’s pathology, significant and often irreversible neurological damage may already have occurred.
Identifying risk earlier also fits a fast-evolving therapeutic landscape in which many disease-modifying therapies and prevention trials require people to be found years before conventional diagnosis.
Earlier awareness can help individuals and families pursue evidence-based lifestyle changes, proactive care planning and research participation, shifting care from reactive management to earlier intervention.
“The rapid evolution of Alzheimer’s therapeutics demands equally innovative biomarkers.” Howard Fillit, co-founder and chief science officer of the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, said.
“As the field moves towards more complex, combination therapy strategies and precision prevention, tools like BrainScope’s will play a critical role in early risk identification and enabling a tailored approach to treatment.” Fillit said.
Key funding for the biomarker’s development was provided by the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, whose early support BrainScope credits as instrumental in achieving this milestone.
The foundation has a longstanding record of advancing Alzheimer’s diagnostics, including early support for technologies such as the first amyloid PET scan and the first blood-based biomarker test for the disease.
“At BrainScope, our mission has always been to translate the brain’s electrical signals into clinically meaningful insights and build the platform that becomes the brain’s vital sign,” Matt Adams, chief executive of BrainScope, said.
“This publication in Scientific Reports validates years of research using EEG to detect functional brain changes in normal elderly with subjective cognitive complaints,” Leslie Prichep, chief scientific officer of BrainScope and first author of the study, said.
“The importance of identifying risk of future cognitive decline, long before structural damage occurs, can have significant impact on brain health in the elderly early enough to meaningfully change outcomes.”
BrainScope is expanding its AI-enabled EEG platform into new clinical indications, including neurodegenerative diseases and stroke.
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