4.7 Review

Disease modification and biomarker development in Parkinson disease: Revision or reconstruction?

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 94, Issue 11, Pages 481-494

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000009107

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Krembil Foundation
  2. Ronald Kimel Foundation Trust
  3. Parkinson's Foundation
  4. International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society
  5. American Parkinson Disease Association
  6. International Parkinson and Movement Disorders Society
  7. Parkinson Foundation
  8. Sunovion
  9. UCB
  10. Valeo Pharma
  11. Acadia PharmaceuXcals Inc
  12. Medtronic of Canada Ltd
  13. ProtoKinetics
  14. Theravance Biopharma US, Inc
  15. Neurocrine Bioscience
  16. Research Councils UK/UK Research Innovation Research Innovation Fellowship by the Medical Research Council [MR/R007446/1]
  17. Wellcome Trust/Medical Research Council Stem Cell Institute [203151/Z/16/Z]
  18. MRC [MC_PC_17230, MR/R007446/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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A fundamental question in advancing Parkinson disease (PD) research is whether it represents one disorder or many. Does each genetic PD inform a common pathobiology or represent a unique entity? Do the similarities between genetic and idiopathic forms of PD outweigh the differences? If aggregates of alpha -synuclein in Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites are present in most (alpha -synucleinopathies), are they also etiopathogenically significant in each (alpha -synuclein pathogenesis)? Does it matter that postmortem studies in PD have demonstrated that mixed protein-aggregate pathology is the rule and pure alpha -synucleinopathy the exception? Should we continue to pursue convergent biomarkers that are representative of the diverse whole of PD or subtype-specific, divergent biomarkers, present in some but absent in most? Have clinical trials that failed to demonstrate efficacy of putative disease-modifying interventions been true failures (shortcomings of the hypotheses, which should be rejected) or false failures (shortcomings of the trials; hypotheses should be preserved)? Each of these questions reflects a nosologic struggle between the lumper's clinicopathologic model that embraces heterogeneity of one disease and the splitter's focus on a pathobiology-specific set of diseases. Most important, even if PD is not a single disorder, can advances in biomarkers and disease modification be revised to concentrate on pathologic commonalities in large, clinically defined populations? Or should our efforts be reconstructed to focus on smaller subgroups of patients, distinguished by well-defined molecular characteristics, regardless of their phenotypic classification? Will our clinical trial constructs be revised to target larger and earlier, possibly even prodromal, cohorts? Or should our trials efforts be reconstructed to target smaller but molecularly defined presymptomatic or postsymptomatic cohorts? At the Krembil Knowledge Gaps in Parkinson's Disease Symposium, the tentative answers to these questions were discussed, informed by the failures and successes of the fields of breast cancer and cystic fibrosis.

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