A Alzheimer's Disease programme at an EU clinic such as our partner Stem Plus (Sofia) is typically €3,000–€8,000 for treatment — a fraction of US or German pricing, at full European GMP standards. Some patients access treatment at no cost through one of the 41 registered Alzheimer's Disease trials — see the candidacy check first.
Alzheimer's disease features amyloid-beta plaques and tau tangles, driving neuronal loss and cognitive decline. Stem-cell approaches address several pathways: placental mesenchymal stem cells are studied for neuroprotection — secreting anti-inflammatory and growth factors that may slow neuronal death — while exosomes derived from stem cells are explored as carriers for therapeutic molecules across the blood-brain barrier and as modulators of amyloid and tau biology. The rationale builds on evidence that stem-cell products reduce neuroinflammation and may support hippocampal neuroplasticity. Reversing established pathology and achieving adequate brain delivery remain unsolved; early trials are small and heterogeneous, with uncertain durability.
Indicative European costs are roughly €3,500–€7,000 per course; exosome-based protocols can reach €5,000–€8,000 due to manufacturing complexity. Pre/post neuroimaging (MRI, PET) adds further expense, and multi-dose protocols are common. For context, approved Alzheimer's drugs range from inexpensive symptomatic agents to costly antibody infusions — the stem-cell figure is indicative and less evidence-backed.
Forty-one registered trials and 9 recruiting studies investigate stem-cell therapy in Alzheimer's. Small cohorts describe modest cognitive-score changes over 6–12 months; most are uncontrolled. Some show shifts in cerebrospinal-fluid or PET amyloid/tau markers, with less consistent functional gains. No trial has prevented decline or shown reversal of neuronal loss. Approved amyloid-targeting antibodies (lecanemab, aducanumab) show modest slowing of early decline — stem-cell benefit is not proven to match them.
| Location | Indicative treatment cost | Regulation |
|---|---|---|
| Bulgaria (EU) · e.g. Stem Plus | €3,000–€8,000 | EU · GMP |
| Germany | €15,000–35,000 | EU · premium |
| USA | €18,000–35,000 | Mostly investigational |
| Serbia (e.g. Swiss Medica) | €7,000–31,000 | Non-EU |
| Mexico | €3,000–12,000 | Non-EU |
| Turkey / Thailand | €5,000–18,000 | Non-EU |
Bulgaria's price reflects lower operating cost inside the same EU GMP framework as Germany — not lower quality. Cell type, number of sessions and supportive care move where a Alzheimer's Disease programme sits in the €3,000–€8,000 range; you receive a fixed written quote after a medical review. The cheapest monitored route of all is a registered clinical trial — check before paying privately. Watch for hidden "cell-expansion" or repeat-cycle fees billed separately.
Lower operating cost and jurisdiction — not lower quality. Bulgaria is a full EU member, so cells are prepared to the same GMP standard as Germany, but clinic overheads and salaries are far lower. That gap, not a quality compromise, is where the saving comes from.
Cheaper is not automatically riskier — but unregulated is. The real test is GMP certification, a certified cell bank and EU oversight, which the EU provides. Be wary of ultra-low prices from clinics that will not document their laboratory or their cells.
The €3,000–€8,000 range covers the medical programme. Add flights, hotel and recovery with our calculator for your true all-in cost from your city.
A fixed written quote follows a medical review of your records — so there are no surprise charges later.
We link primary regulators, registries and peer-reviewed research so you can verify everything yourself — plus the treating clinic's own materials.
Indicative ranges for planning, compiled from public market data; confirmed pricing follows a medical review. Not medical advice.
位于欧盟核心的 GMP 认证再生医学诊所——费用 3,000–8,000 欧元起,仅为美国或德国价格的一小部分。为来自 50 多个国家的国际患者提供个性化方案。
免费医疗评估