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          Vials and packaging for Leqembi, a new Alzheimer's medication approved in the U.S., but not yet in Europe. Illustration: Alex Hogan/STAT; Photo: Eisai via AP

          LONDON — Starting Sunday, Alzheimer’s specialists will gather for a major conference in Amsterdam, convening at a time when the field, depending on which expert you ask, has some rare momentum behind it, with new therapies starting to show benefits for patients.

          But despite the hard-won victories, the arrival of the new therapies presents a new set of challenges in Europe as countries plan for their possible rollouts, scientists and doctors told STAT.

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          Health systems will have to adapt to diagnose people earlier and monitor them for side effects associated with the treatments. If their medicines win European approval, companies will have to strike reimbursement deals in all member states, a process that often leaves some countries waiting years for new drugs to become available. The hurdles mean the therapies will likely be offered only at certain centers initially, constraining how many patients have access to them, doctors from across Europe said.

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