 The spiced saffron beat out placebo in this randomized double-blind study, but Alzheimer's patients aren't on sugar pills. They're on drugs like Denipazil, sold as Aricept. If some drug company wanted to release a new drug, they'd have to compare it not to placebo, but to the current leading treatment. And why should it be any different with flowers? A 22-week, multi-center, randomized double-blind, controlled trial of saffron in the treatment of mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease. Saffron vs. Aricept, the leading drug. Here are the results. In a graph of cognitive dysfunction, the circles are saffron. The triangles are the leading drug. That costs about $2,000 a year and associated with all sorts of side effects. Can you tell the difference? Saffron worked just as well as Aricept, which is to say not very well at all. But remember what untreated Alzheimer's patients look like? They get worse. The reason drugs are prescribed is just to slow down the progression of Alzheimer's, so we still have a long way to go, but saffron appeared to work just as well as the leading drug and without the side effects.