For families navigating the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease, managing treatment can feel like a full-time job. Until recently, receiving advanced anti-amyloid therapy meant scheduling frequent, hours-long appointments at specialized medical facilities. Patients had to travel to a clinic every two weeks just to sit for an intravenous (IV) infusion.
That routine is about to change for the better. On July 13, 2026, the FDA approved a new, once-weekly under-the-skin (subcutaneous) injection version of the Alzheimer's medication Leqembi, branded as Leqembi Iqlik®.
Developed by Eisai and Biogen, this milestone approval means that for the very first time, patients can start their early-stage Alzheimer's treatment right from day one in the comfort of their own homes.
Leqembi is a targeted antibody therapy designed to clear amyloid plaques—the toxic protein buildups in the brain associated with Alzheimer's disease.
The FDA previously authorized a subcutaneous version of Leqembi back in August 2025, but it came with a significant catch: it was strictly for "maintenance". Patients still had to complete their initial 18 months of treatment via regular IV infusions at a hospital before they could switch to at-home shots.
This new approval completely removes that barrier. Doctors can now prescribe the under-the-skin autoinjector from the very beginning of a patient's treatment journey, giving families full flexibility.
Instead of enduring an IV line and waiting around an infusion clinic, patients or their caregivers can administer the medication quickly at home using a pre-filled autoinjector.
To grant this expanded approval, the FDA reviewed comprehensive data from Phase 3 clinical trials, specifically looking at sub-studies from the Clarity AD long-term extension program. The research confirmed that the weekly at-home injection delivers the exact same medical value as the clinic-based alternative:
The shift from hospital infusions to at-home injections goes far beyond simple convenience. For patients living in rural areas or dealing with transportation, scheduling, and physical mobility challenges, this approval radically improves access to timely healthcare.
It also drastically lowers the daily burden placed on family caregivers, who no longer need to take frequent time off work to drive their loved ones to medical clinics. Furthermore, by moving these regular treatments out of medical facilities, it frees up critical clinic capacity and infusion chairs for other patients who genuinely require in-office medical supervision.
By turning a complex, hospital-centered procedure into a simple, 15-second weekly routine at home, this approval introduces an incredibly valuable, practical era of care for families managing early Alzheimer's disease.