| Literature DB >> 30420802 |
Geraldine Hipp1,2, Michel Vaillant3, Nico J Diederich2, Kirsten Roomp4, Venkata P Satagopam4, Peter Banda4, Estelle Sandt5, Kathleen Mommaerts5,6, Sabine K Schmitz1, Laura Longhino2, Alexandra Schweicher2, Anne-Marie Hanff2, Béatrice Nicolai2, Pierre Kolber1,2, Dorothea Reiter1,2, Lukas Pavelka1,2, Sylvia Binck1,2, Claire Pauly1,2, Lars Geffers1, Fay Betsou5, Manon Gantenbein7, Jochen Klucken8, Thomas Gasser9, Michele T Hu10, Rudi Balling1, Rejko Krüger1,2.
Abstract
While genetic advances have successfully defined part of the complexity in Parkinson's disease (PD), the clinical characterization of phenotypes remains challenging. Therapeutic trials and cohort studies typically include patients with earlier disease stages and exclude comorbidities, thus ignoring a substantial part of the real-world PD population. To account for these limitations, we implemented the Luxembourg PD study as a comprehensive clinical, molecular and device-based approach including patients with typical PD and atypical parkinsonism, irrespective of their disease stage, age, comorbidities, or linguistic background. To provide a large, longitudinally followed, and deeply phenotyped set of patients and controls for clinical and fundamental research on PD, we implemented an open-source digital platform that can be harmonized with international PD cohort studies. Our interests also reflect Luxembourg-specific areas of PD research, including vision, gait, and cognition. This effort is flanked by comprehensive biosampling efforts assuring high quality and sustained availability of body liquids and tissue biopsies. We provide evidence for the feasibility of such a cohort program with deep phenotyping and high quality biosampling on parkinsonism in an environment with structural specificities and alert the international research community to our willingness to collaborate with other centers. The combination of advanced clinical phenotyping approaches including device-based assessment will create a comprehensive assessment of the disease and its variants, its interaction with comorbidities and its progression. We envision the Luxembourg Parkinson's study as an important research platform for defining early diagnosis and progression markers that translate into stratified treatment approaches.Entities:
Keywords: cohort; deep phenotyping; longitudinal; parkinsonism; stratification
Year: 2018 PMID: 30420802 PMCID: PMC6216083 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2018.00326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Objectives.
| Objective | Tools | Endpoints |
|---|---|---|
| Clinico-genetic stratification of parkinsonism | −Deep clinical phenotyping (motor and non-motor) with annual follow-up −Genotyping (NeuroChip; −Investigation of exposure factors −Different disease stages | Disease history under real-world conditions |
| Differential diagnosis of atypical parkinsonism | −Inclusion of all atypical PD forms −Inclusion of patients with conversion of diagnosis in follow-up of | Conversion markers |
| Identification of differential cognitive profiles in PD and atypical PD | −Extensive cognitive phenotyping (five cognitive domains) −Investigation of MCI/PDD MDS Level 2 criteria −Tests to investigate cognition in atypical PD forms −Assessment in different languages in a multilingual population −Establishment of population specific normative data | Cognitive markers for PDD and DLB |
| Dissection of association between gait disturbances and cognition | −Detailed assessment of gait including sensor based measures [mPower ( −In-depth and a continuous information collection about disease progression −Various aspects of gait can be linked to various cognition factors | Validation of sensor based assessment for future clinical trials Cognitive predictors for gait impairment |
| Definition of vision as an early disease marker | −Detailed assessment of vision including color discrimination, contrast sensitivity, and facial emotion recognition ( | Vision as an early marker of PD Facial emotion recognition as a marker for PD |
Studies and percentage of common assessments with HELP-PD.
| Study name | % of tests integrated in HELP-PD |
|---|---|
| LONG-PD (GEoPD, | 93% |
| OPDC ( | 73% |
| PPMI ( | 67% |
| DeNoPa (visit 1) ( | 56% |
Communication channels developed.
| Web | Information |
|---|---|
| Dual-entry website ( | Research and medical professionals Patients and control subject |
| Facebook site (Parkinson: Recherche au Luxembourg) | Study update |
| Use of established social media channels from partner institutions | |
| Comprehensive NCER-PD video | In German and French |
| Multilingual flyer and posters | Information about PD, information about study participation |
| Fact sheets | Information on disease-related subjects |
| Bi-annual print newsletter | Regular update of study and Parkinson’s disease care and research in general |
Sample size for baseline comparisons.
| Smaller proportion, πa | 0.01 | 0.05 | 0.1 | 0.15 | 0.2 |
| Larger proportion, πb | 0.031 | 0.087 | 0.147 | 0.205 | 0.26 |
Sample size for longitudinal within PD cohort comparisons.
| Larger Prob. In larger group | Larger Prob. In smaller group | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prob. group 1 | Prob. group 2 ( | Difference | Attained power | Prob. group 2 ( | Difference | Attained power |
| 0,05 | 0,134 | 0,084 | 81,9 | 0,145 | 0,095 | 81,8 |
| 0,1 | 0,206 | 0,106 | 81,9 | 0,206 | 0,106 | 81,9 |
| 0,15 | 0,271 | 0,121 | 81,9 | 0,271 | 0,121 | 81,9 |
| 0,2 | 0,332 | 0,132 | 81,8 | 0,332 | 0,132 | 81,8 |
| 0,25 | 0,391 | 0,141 | 81,8 | 0,391 | 0,141 | 81,8 |
Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Patients | Controls | |
|---|---|---|
| Inclusion criteria | Diagnosis of parkinsonism | Subjects without ND disease |
| >18 years of age | >18 years of age | |
| Exclusion criteria | Absence of parkinsonism | Presence of neurodegenerative disorder |
| Symptomatic parkinsonism | ||
| Active cancer | Active cancer | |
| Pregnant women | Pregnant women | |
| Limited capacity of consent on the part of the subject, if there is no legally determined tutor | ||
FIGURE 1Flexible participation concept.
Assessment tools for motor function.
| Self-reported | Rating scale | Objective measure | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Global motor | +MDS-UPDRS III and +IV | ||
| Bradykinesia | +MDS-UPDRS III | mPower tapping activity ( | |
| Fine/gross motor and coordination | +Purdue Pegboard∗ ( | ||
| Gait-general | +MDS-UPDRS III | Timed up and go | |
| Freezing of gait | Freezing of Gait Questionnaire | +MDS-UPDRS III | Instrumental gait assessment ( |
| PSP specific motor dysfunction | Unified PSP Rating Scale ( |
Questionnaires for non-motor symptoms in PD.
| Function/symptom | Test | |
|---|---|---|
| Global | General non-motor symptoms | +Parkinson’s Disease Non-Motor Questionnaire (PD-NMS) |
| Psychiatric symptoms | Depression | +Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) |
| Apathy | +Starkstein Apathy Scale (SAS) | |
| Dysautonomic function | Including, e.g., constipation, daytime somnolence, symptomatic hypotension, erectile and urinary dysfunction | +SCOPA-AUT |
| Sleep | General | +Parkinson’s Disease Sleeping Scale (PDSS) |
| REM sleep Behavior Disorder (RBD) | +RBD Screening Questionnaire (RBDSQ) | |
| Quality of life | Eight disease-related issues: mobility, activities of daily living, emotional well-being, stigma, social support cognitions, communication, and bodily discomfort | +Parkinson’s Disease Quality of Life Questionnaire (PD-QoL-39) |
Tests used to assess cognition.
| Domain | Function | Test |
|---|---|---|
| Global cognition | +Montréal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) | |
| Attention/working memory | Visual attention | +TMT∗-A |
| Divided (visual/auditory attention) | TAP∗∗-Divided Attention | |
| Visuospatial short-term memory | Block spans (forward) | |
| Auditory short-term memory | Digit spans (forward) | |
| Visuo-spatial working memory | Block spans (backward) | |
| Auditory working memory | Digit spans (backward) | |
| Executive | Mental flexibility/set shifting | +TMT-B |
| Automatic response inhibition | STROOP test (Kaplan) | |
| Planning | +Clock Test – Placement of numbers | |
| Conceptualization | Similarities (+MoCA, FAB) | |
| Frontal functions | Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB) | |
| Response initiation | +Letter Fluency F (MoCA) | |
| Memory | Verbal learning + episodic memory consolidation | Immediate and delayed word list recall (CERAD) |
| Word Recognition (CERAD) | ||
| Visuospatial | Visuo-perception | Benton’s Judgment of Line Orientation |
| Visuo-construction | +Wire Cube (MoCA) | |
| Interlocking Pentagons (MMSE) | ||
| +Clock Test (MoCA) | ||
| Language | Language access | Category Fluency (animals) |
| GREMOTs denomination of 36 substantives and 36 verbs |
Tests used to assess sensory function.
| Function | Test |
|---|---|
| Odor identification | +Burghart Sniffin’ Sticks – 16 items identification test |
| Color discrimination | Farnsworth Munsell 100 Hue test |
| Contrast sensitivity | Pelli Robson Letter Chart |
| Kybervision Contrast Sensitivity ( | |
| Facial emotion recognition | Ekman 60 Faces Test |
FIGURE 3Data and sample flow in ND-collection. Subject personal data is securely collected and only the clinical team has access to that data. The clinical team generates a primary pseudonym and binds it to the subject’s personal record. The clinical data is deposited into REDCap, the Electronic Data Capturing (EDC) system, along with the pseudonym and the barcodes of the samples which are also recorded in the REDCap system. Sample Annotations go into the Data Integration and Analysis Platform which is a part of the Data and Computing Platform hosted at the LCSB in a secure data center. Within the Data and Computing Platform at the LCSB, the pseudonymized clinical data from REDCap is accessed by the Data Integration and Analysis Platform via an Application Programming Interface. As part of the direct clinical assessment, the kinetic gait data from the shoe sensors is deposited using the primary pseudonym generated by clinical team at the PRC.
FIGURE 2Omics assessment. ∗PBMC: Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cell, ∗∗iPSC: induced pluripotent stem cells.
Participation numbers in Level B.
| PD patients | Healthy controls | Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visit 1 | Visit 2 | Visit 3 | |||
| Level B neuropsychology | 192 | 29 | 4 | 252 | 477 |
| Level B gait | 137 | 99 | 63 | 87 | 386 |
| Level B vision | 75 | 37 | 7 | 95 | 214 |
| Level B PSP assessment | 8 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 8 |
| Stool | 280 | 162 | 60 | 394 | 896 |
| Skin biopsy | 58 | 26 | 11 | 69 | 164 |