Share This Page

FDA Approves At-Home Leqembi Treatment for Alzheimer’s

Caregiver assisting elder with dementia injecting Leqembi Iqlik

People beginning treatment with Leqembi have traditionally needed to visit an infusion center every two weeks. For patients and caregivers, that can mean recurring travel, scheduling difficulties, and long hours spent receiving treatment.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has now approved an at-home injection option that allows eligible patients to begin Leqembi treatment outside an infusion center.

The medication can be administered by the patient or by a caregiver who has received appropriate training. The change may make treatment more accessible, especially for people who live far from specialist medical centers or rely on family members for transportation.

What the FDA approved

Leqembi, also known by its generic name lecanemab, is a disease-modifying Alzheimer’s treatment developed by Eisai and Biogen.

The new approval allows eligible patients to begin treatment using a subcutaneous injection administered under the skin. Previously, patients generally began treatment through intravenous infusions at a medical facility.

The home injection is designed to deliver the same active medication in a more convenient form. It does not represent a new Alzheimer’s drug or a different treatment strategy.

The main change is how the medication is delivered.

Where the injection can be given

Patients or caregivers may administer the injection in several approved areas of the body:

  • Abdomen: At least two inches away from the belly button. This may be the easiest location for many patients who inject themselves.
  • Thighs: Into the front or middle-outer portion of the thigh.
  • Upper arms: Into the outer back portion of the upper arm. This location should be used only when a caregiver or healthcare professional administers the injection.

Patients and caregivers should receive detailed instruction from the treating medical team before attempting an injection at home.

Injection sites may need to be rotated to reduce irritation. The medication should not be injected into skin that is tender, bruised, red, hardened, scarred, or otherwise damaged.

Caregiver assisting elder with dementia injecting Leqembi Iqlik

Why at-home treatment matters

Leqembi requires repeated doses over an extended period. Even when a treatment is medically appropriate, the practical burden can make it difficult for families to begin or continue therapy.

Regular infusion appointments may require:

  • Transportation to a specialty center.
  • Time away from work for caregivers.
  • Coordination with other medical appointments.
  • Long waits before, during, and after an infusion.
  • Additional difficulty for people living in rural areas.

Allowing patients to receive the medication at home could reduce some of those burdens.

For caregivers, the change may provide greater scheduling flexibility. For patients, it may mean fewer disruptions and less time spent traveling to medical facilities.

However, at-home administration does not mean that Leqembi has become a simple or routine treatment. It remains a specialized Alzheimer’s therapy requiring careful patient selection and continuing medical oversight.

Who may receive Leqembi

Leqembi is approved for people in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease.

This generally includes people with:

  • Mild cognitive impairment caused by Alzheimer’s disease.
  • Mild Alzheimer’s dementia.
  • Confirmed evidence of amyloid plaques in the brain.

Leqembi has not been approved for people with moderate or severe Alzheimer’s dementia.

Before beginning treatment, patients typically undergo testing to confirm that Alzheimer’s-related amyloid is present. Doctors must also evaluate the patient’s overall health, medications, genetic risk factors, and possible vulnerability to treatment complications.

Leqembi slows decline

Leqembi is designed to remove amyloid-beta plaques from the brain. These abnormal protein deposits are one of the defining biological features of Alzheimer’s disease.

In a large clinical trial, people receiving Leqembi experienced a slower rate of cognitive and functional decline than those receiving a placebo.

(The treatment slowed decline by approximately 27% over 18 months on the study’s primary clinical measure.)

That result was statistically significant, but it does not mean that patients improved or regained abilities already lost to Alzheimer’s disease.

Leqembi does not cure Alzheimer’s. It may modestly slow progression in appropriately selected patients who are treated during the early stages of the disease.

Safety monitoring remains essential

The convenience of home injections does not eliminate the treatment’s risks.

Leqembi can cause amyloid-related imaging abnormalities, commonly called ARIA. These abnormalities may involve swelling in the brain or small areas of bleeding.

Many cases cause no noticeable symptoms and are discovered only on MRI scans. In other cases, patients may experience:

  • Headache.
  • Confusion.
  • Dizziness.
  • Vision changes.
  • Nausea.
  • Difficulty walking.
  • Seizures or other neurological symptoms.

Rare cases can be serious or life-threatening.

Patients still need MRI scans before and during treatment. Their doctors may also recommend additional monitoring depending on their symptoms, medical history, genetic profile, or use of blood-thinning medications.

Families should immediately report new neurological symptoms to the treating medical team.

What this means for caregivers

For caregivers, the new option could make Leqembi treatment significantly easier to manage.

Home administration may reduce travel, missed work, and the strain of organizing repeated infusion appointments. It may also allow treatment to fit more naturally into a patient’s daily routine.

Before taking responsibility for an injection, caregivers should make sure they understand:

  • How to store and prepare the medication.
  • How to select and rotate injection sites.
  • How to administer the full dose correctly.
  • How to dispose of used injection equipment safely.
  • Which injection reactions are expected.
  • Which symptoms require immediate medical attention.

Caregivers should not treat the home injection as a replacement for medical follow-up. Regular appointments, MRI monitoring, laboratory testing, and communication with the Alzheimer’s treatment team remain necessary.

A practical advance rather than a new breakthrough

The FDA approval does not make Leqembi more effective, and it does not remove the drug’s medical risks.

What it may do is make treatment more practical.

For some families, the ability to begin therapy at home could remove a major obstacle to accessing a disease-modifying Alzheimer’s treatment. It may be particularly valuable for patients who live far from infusion centers or whose caregivers struggle to manage frequent clinic visits.

The decision represents an important step toward making Alzheimer’s treatments easier to deliver. Whether it substantially expands access will also depend on insurance coverage, medication costs, caregiver training, specialist availability, and the ability of medical systems to provide appropriate safety monitoring.

References & Resources

FDA Approves First At-Home Starting Dose for Alzheimer’s Disease Treatment
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (July 13, 2026)

FDA Approves At-Home Starter Dose of Eisai-Biogen Alzheimer’s Drug
Reuters (July 13, 2026)

FDA Recommends Additional, Earlier MRI Monitoring for Patients Taking Leqembi
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (April 3, 2026)

Share to Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter
X
Reddit
WhatsApp
Email

Related:

Email me when people comment
Notify of
guest

0 Comments

This site was inspired by my Mom’s autoimmune dementia.

It is a place where we separate out the wheat from the chafe, the important articles & videos from each week’s river of news. Google gets a new post on Alzheimer’s or dementia every 7 minutes. That can overwhelm anyone looking for help. This site filters out, focuses on and offers only the best information. it has helped hundreds of thousands of people since it debuted in 2007. Thanks to our many subscribers for your supportive feedback.

The site is dedicated to all those preserving the dignity of the community of people living with dementia.

Peter Berger, Editor

Share this page To

Dementia Books & Videos on Amazon:

More From Alzheimer's Weekly

Prevention

Fat People Get Less Dementia

2 MILLION BRITONS, in the biggest study in history, astonished researchers. Obese people had 29% less dementia risk than normal-weight people. Underweight? Bigger risk. See

Read More »
Share to Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Facebook

Visit Alzheimer's Weekly On

Welcome

Alzheimer’s & Dementia Weekly was inspired by my mother’s journey with autoimmune dementia and my dad’s with Parkinson’s dementia.

Walking beside them opened my eyes to the confusion, the courage, and the deep humanity found in families and professionals caring for someone they love.

Since its debut in 2007, this site has had one clear mission:
to separate the wheat from the chaff — to highlight only the most essential articles, studies, tools, and videos from the overwhelming river of dementia-related information.
(At last count, Google receives a new post on Alzheimer’s or dementia every seven minutes.) For anyone seeking clarity or support, that constant flow can be exhausting and discouraging.

Alzheimer’s Weekly filters, translates, and explains what matters most, helping hundreds of thousands of families, clinicians, and care teams around the world make sense of the latest research and best practices.

This site is dedicated to everyone who works—often quietly and tirelessly—to preserve dignity in the community of people living with dementia.


About the Editor

With experience in dementia caregiving, public education, and Alzheimer’s-focused writing—and a professional research background shaped in what many consider one of the world’s top laboratories—I work to make complex findings clear, practical, and genuinely helpful for both families and professionals providing care.

My goal is simple:
Translate the best science into guidance that lightens the load, strengthens understanding, and helps every person with dementia live with dignity.

Peter Berger
Editor, Alzheimer’s Weekly

Free:
Alzheimer's & Dementia
Weekly Newsletter

INCLUDES BONUS BOOKLET:
15 Simple Things You Can Do to Care For a Loved One with Dementia or Memory Loss
News, Treatments, Care Tips, Diet, Research, Diagnosis, Therapies & Prevention
News to Get at the Truth

Subscribe To Our Weekly Newsletter

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x