Alzheimer's disease is on the rise, but researchers such as Dr. Michael Devous expect the numbers to shift into reverse.

"I think we're going to cure Alzheimer's disease, and we're not far away from it," said Devous, a professor and director of the NeuroImaging Core for the Alzheimer's Disease Center at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. "Ten years ago I didn't think so, but we've made tremendous progress. … We haven't cured anyone from this disease yet, but I'm hopeful that the trials we've started will change the course of this disease in a positive way."

It's a rare burst of good news for this specific disease. According to an April study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, Alzheimer's, the most common form of dementia or memory loss that typically worsens over time, is now the nation's sixth-leading cause of death.

It has surpassed cancer and heart disease as the costliest disease, affecting more than 5.4 million Americans, with about 4.1 million requiring intensive care that totals $200 billion a year. Patients live an average of four to eight years after an Alzheimer's diagnosis, but some live as long as 20 years, with 75 percent of those with Alzheimer's going to a nursing home by age 80.

Current treatments may temporarily ease symptoms but don't slow the disease, which can lead to patients losing recognition of loved ones, the ability to speak or recall the names for objects and mastery of simple life skills.

Researchers, however, find hope in three promising approaches: healthful lifestyle changes, genetic testing to identify those at higher risk and removal of amyloid plaque.

While the precise role of plaque is still being studied, it's known that these deposits of apparently toxic protein peptide settle between the brain's nerve cells and are found disproportionately in people with Alzheimer's, according to the National Institutes of Health's National Institute on Aging.

Adding to the optimism is the Texas Alzheimer's Research and Care Consortium, which pools efforts from Texas institutions. For Devous, the game-changer came last year with the Food and Drug Administration's approval of Amyvid, an amyloid imaging agent that allows researchers to track plaque in positron emission tomography scans. So far, he has learned that plaque removal doesn't help those in advanced stages of Alzheimer's, probably because at that point, the plaque has done irreversible damage.

That has turned his team's focus to finding and removing plaque from those who don't have symptoms or are in the early stages of the disease.

"There's a mild cognitive impairment which precedes dementia," Devous said. "We are having clinical trials to see if removing plaque will keep them from getting worse and maybe even allow them to get better."

Eat less red meat?

Lifestyle changes can also slow or prevent the growth of plaque, said Dr. Mary Quiceno, a neurologist and director of the Cognitive and Memory Disorders Clinic at the Alzheimer's Disease Center at the University of Texas Southwestern.

Conversely, plaque buildup can be accelerated by high blood pressure, arterial sclerosis, strokes, clogged arteries, concussions, inflammation and diabetes.

"All of us are at risk, and all of us can do something about it," Quiceno said.

Underscoring a new understanding that what's good for the heart is good for the brain, an April study in the Archives of Neurology found that those who follow the Mediterranean diet have less blood vessel damage in the brain than those who consume red meats, saturated fats and refined grains.

Quiceno said exercise is also drawing attention from researchers as a deterrent.

"Exercise has a direct effect on brain-cell growth, particularly in the hippocampus," an area of the brain that plays an important role in memory, she said. "It's something we need to emphasize earlier with our kids."

Those who are fit at midlife have a lower risk of developing Alzheimer's disease and other dementias later, according to a study that followed more than 19,000 men and women for 24 years.

Getting adequate sleep, socializing and building cognitive reserve by learning things can lower the risk of Alzheimer's, too, Quiceno said.

It's in the genes

For some, however, genetics can trump even the best efforts.

The Alzheimer's Prevention Initiative, an international collaborative effort run by the Banner Alzheimer Institute in Phoenix, is studying people at genetic risk for developing Alzheimer's in their 40s and 50s, as well as people at genetic risk for the more common Alzheimer's that occurs later in life.

Individuals at genetic risk for early-onset Alzheimer's represent less than 1 percent of all Alzheimer's cases, but they offer an accelerated look at how the disease can progress as the amyloid plaque starts forming in their brains in their late 20s and early 30s, said Jessica Langbaum, a principal scientist and associate director of the initiative.

"That's the hope — that the lessons we learn from people who carry this rare genetic mutation will be applicable to other individuals," she said.