Is this true
There have been several reports that anti-tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFa) agents may affect amyloidosis in inflammatory disease, such as rheumatoid arthritis and familial Mediterranean fever.2,3 Rapid cognitive improvement after perispinal etanercept administration had been reported.4,5 This may be the first report to suggest an effect on Ab/p-tau in a person with AD by anti-TNF. Similar results were obtained in animals.6,7 A previous study indicated that intracerebroventricular administration of infliximab reduced amyloid plaques and tau phosphorylation in APP/PS1 mice.8 The case report suggests the pivotal role of TNF-a and the interaction between TNF and amyloid in the pathogenesis of AD. The efficiency and safety of infliximab need to be researched further in large sample trials or randomized control trials. The current results suggest that intrathecal infliximab offers a superior alternative therapeutic approach for AD and potentially for other neurodegenerative disorders in which TNF-a is involved in the pathogenesis, such as Parkinson’s disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
There is also a DR, in US who claims tht perispinal entrancept also works through tumor necrosis factor and has treated several patients.
I've studied Etanercept in some detail. First of all, I do think it's the most effective short term remedy for dementia systems; there's a considerable amount of video evidence for that. However, its effects generally appear to last hours to days. When they wear off, symptoms return. In theory, if the research you mentioned extends to humans, repeated administrations would actually reduce plaque load of both major forms, and therefore might induce longterm remission from disease.
There are a few problems, however. One is cost: you're looking at $900 or so per shot, at least in the US. (Perhaps it's cheaper elsewhere.) Secondly, you need the patient to remain near the clinic so as to be able to receive a shot every few days. Thirdly, it requires injection into the cervical spine in the neck, which is an exceedingly dangerous procedure except for doctors properly trained in such injections; this is not like injecting steroids in your leg. And finally, although TNFa is proinflammatory, it has a protective role to play in the CNS, which as the name suggests is tumor destruction. So in theory, you're trying to swap dementia for an increased risk of brain or spine tumors. My own take on the human data I've looked at, none of which being in the form of a controlled trial, is that it might actually cure dementia, but unless you have $100K in the bank or have a cheap gray market source, it's not viable.