4.7 Editorial Material

Planning for Prevention of Parkinson Disease Now Is the Time INTRODUCTION

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 99, Issue 7, Pages 1-9

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000200789

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Farmer Family Foundation Parkinson's Research Initiative, NIH [R01NS110879]
  2. Melvin Yahr Early Career Award in Movement Disorders Research
  3. Parkinson's Foundation [PF-MET-2011]

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This article highlights the importance of Parkinson's disease prevention trials and reviews precedents in prevention trials for Alzheimer's and Huntington's diseases. The critical design elements for PD prevention trials are discussed, including participant selection, therapeutic interventions, and outcome measures.
Parkinson disease (PD) is a chronic progressive neurodegenerative disease with increasing worldwide prevalence. Despite many trials of neuroprotective therapies in manifest PD, no disease-modifying therapy has been established. Over the past several decades, a series of breakthroughs have identified discrete populations at substantially increased risk of developing PD. Based on this knowledge, now is the time to design and implement PD prevention trials. This endeavor builds on experience gained from early prevention trials in Alzheimer disease and Huntington disease. This article first reviews prevention trial precedents in these other neurodegenerative diseases before focusing on the critical design elements for PD prevention trials, including whom to enroll for these trials, what therapeutics to test, and how to measure outcomes in prevention trials. Our perspective reflects progress and remaining challenges that motivated a 2021 conference, Planning for Prevention of Parkinson: A Trial Design Symposium and Workshop.

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