| Literature DB >> 22254150 |
Zinovia Kefalopoulou1, Iciar Aviles-Olmos, Thomas Foltynie.
Abstract
Neural cell transplantation and gene therapy have attracted considerable interest as promising therapeutic alternatives for patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). Preclinical and open-label studies have suggested that grafted fetal neural tissue or viral vector gene transfer can achieve considerable biochemical and clinical improvements, whereas subsequent double-blind, placebo-controlled protocols have produced rather more modest and variable results. Detailed evaluation of these discordant findings has highlighted several crucial issues such as patient selection criteria, details surrounding transplantation or gene therapy methodologies, as well as the study designs themselves that ought to be carefully considered in the planning phases of future clinical trials. Beyond the provision of symptomatic efficacy and safety data, it also remains to be identified whether the possibilities offered by stem cell and gene therapy technological advances might translate to meaningful neuroprotection and/or disease-modifying effects or alleviate the nonmotor aspects of PD and thus offer additional benefits beyond those achieved through conventional pharmacotherapy or deep brain stimulation (DBS).Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22254150 PMCID: PMC3255302 DOI: 10.4061/2011/804041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 2042-0080
Comparison of tissue/cell sources for cell replacement strategies in PD.
| Type of cell | Availability/expandability/proliferation | Capacity to differentiate into DA phenotypes | Tumor formation potential | Ethical concerns | GID | Major advantage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fetal VM tissue | +/− | +++ | − | + | + | Clinical experience |
| Embryonic stem cells | +++ | ++ | + | ++ | ? | Expandability and differentiation |
| Neural stem cells | + | + | +/− | +/− | ? | Opportunity of autotransplantation |
| Mesenchymal somatic stem cells | + | +/− | ? | − | ? | Opportunity of autotransplantation |
| Reprogrammed somatic cells | ++ | ++ | + | + | ? | Easily approached autologous source (e.g., fibroblasts retrieved from skin biopsies) |
(?): unknown, (−): none, (+/−): poor, (+): some, (++): readily observable, (+++): extensive.
Patient-centred comparison of gene therapy interventions for PD.
| Gene therapy strategy | Advantages | Disadvantages | Patient target group |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neurotrophic factor delivery | Disease-modifying/neuroprotective potential | Likely to cause structural and functional effects beyond the intended targets | Early-stage PD |
| Prodrug approach | (i) Striatal DA synthesis dependent on subsequent peripheral administration of L-dopa → modulation of | (i) Possibility of accumulation of DA in striatal neurons | (i) More advanced-stage PD with motor complications |
| Ectopic DA production | (i) Independent of peripheral L-dopa | (i) More advanced-stage PD with motor complications | |
| Continuous DOPA delivery strategy | (i) Site specific continuous DA—supply | Depends on sufficient endogenous AADC activity | (i) More advanced-stage PD with motor complications |
| Modulation of basal ganglia activity | Proposed to mimic clinical results of DBS, which has established clinical effectiveness | (i) Limited experience | Same as DBS |