| Literature DB >> 31974807 |
Susanne A Schneider1, Roy N Alcalay2.
Abstract
In recent years, numerous clinical trials for disease modification in Parkinson's disease (PD) have failed, possibly because of a "one-size-fits all" approach. Alternatively, a precision medicine approach, which customises treatments based on patients' individual genotype, may help reach disease modification. Here, we review clinical trials that target genetic forms of PD, i.e., GBA-associated and LRRK2-associated PD. In summary, six ongoing studies which explicitely recruit GBA-PD patients, and two studies which recruit LRRK2-PD patients, were identified. Available data on mechanisms of action, study design, and challenges of therapeutic trials are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Ambroxol; Clinical trial; GBA; Genetic Parkinson’s disease; Kinase inhibitor; LRRK2; SNCA; Small molecule compounds; Superprecision medicine; TORC1 inhibitor; Venglustat
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31974807 PMCID: PMC7035220 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-020-09705-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Benefits of precision medicine [2]
| Diagnose disease more accurately |
| Select optimal therapies and target medicines and dosages precisely |
| Increase safety, reduce adverse drug reactions |
| Detect onset of disease at the earliest moment, incl. detection of early subclinical correlates of neuronal death prior to clinical (motor) manifestation |
| Shift emphasis in medicine from reaction to prevention (i.e., protection of neurons to avoid neuroal death) |
| Increase the efficiency of the health system by improving quality |
GBA-targeting treatments for PD in the clinical phase aiming at modulation of glycosphingolipid turnover and restoration of enzyme function
| GBA | MOVES-PD study Part 1 | MOVES-PD study Part 2 | AiM-PD | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compound | Venglustat (GZ/SAR402671) | Ambroxol | RTB101 | LTI-291 | PR001 | |
| Administration | Oral | Oral | Oral | Oral | Injections | |
| Sponsor | Sanofi | UCL and Cure PD Trust | Restorbio | LTI/Allergan | Prevail | |
| RCT No | NCT02906020 | NCT02941822 | (NL7061; NTR7299)a | |||
| Mechanism | Glucosylceramide synthase inhibiton; reduction of GBA-related GSLs | GCase activation | TORC1 inhibition | GCase activation | Gene therapy, AAV-based | |
| Status | Completed | Recruiting, estimated primary completion 2021 | Estimated completion 04-2018 | Ongoing; data expected 2020 | Recruiting in Leiden (NL) | Clinical centers initiated |
| Phase | 2 | 2a | 1b/2a | 1b | 1b | |
| Design | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo–controlled, sequential cohort | Prospective, single-centre, open label | Multicenter 2:1 randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled | Multicenter, 2:1 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | Randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel study | Randomized, double-blind, sham procedure-controlled, ascending dose study |
| Total | 17 | 10 + 10 | 45 | Apprx. 40 | 30/16 | |
| GBA-PD | ||||||
| Idiopathic PD | No | No | ||||
| Age | 18–80 yrs (mean 58 yrs) | 40–80 yrs | 18 years or older | |||
| Duration | 36 weeks | 52 weeks + 104 weeks extension | 6 months | 4 weeks | 28 days | |
| Doses tested | 3 escalating doses | 1 dose | 5 escalating doses | 300 mg; ± sirolimus | 10 or 60 mg once daily | Two escalating dose cohorts |
see https://www.trialregister.nl/trial/7061 for more information
Fig. 1Treatment approaches for GBA-associated PD include modulation of gylcosphingolipid turnover and restoration of enzyme function
Fig. 2World map of LRRK2-associated Parkinsonism. 533 cases have been reported. Circles reflect frequency per region. Data and image were retrieved from the MDSGene Website [47]
LRRK2-targeted treatments including LRRK2 inihibitors and antisense oligomeres under development for PD
| LRRK2 | Denali trial | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compound | DNL-201 | No public data | No public data | No public data | BIIB094 |
| Sponsor | Denali | GSK | Pfizer | Genetech | Biogen |
| RCT No | NCT03710707 | NCT03976349 | |||
| Mechanism | LRRK2 inhibition | LRRK2 inhibition | LRRK2 inhibition | LRRK2 inhibition | Antisense oligomere |
| Status | Ongoing, recruiting, data expected end of 2019 | Planned | Under development | Under development | Ongoing |
| Phase | 1b | N/a | N/a | N/a | Phase 1 |
| Design | Multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled | N/a | N/a | N/a | |
| Total | 30 | N/a | N/a | N/a | 62 |
| LRRK2-PD | N/a | N/a | N/a | ||
| Idiopathic PD | N/a | N/a | N/a | ||
| Age | 30–75 | N/a | N/a | N/a | 35–80 |
| Duration | 28 days | N/a | N/a | N/a | N.d. |
| Doses tested | Low / High | N/a | N/a | N/a | Single-and multiple-ascending-dose |
Top four challenges and barriers to effective clinical trials as perceived by health professionals, patients, and their caregivers—for full list see [65]
| Scientists and other health professionals | Patients and caregivers |
|---|---|
| Lack of funding | Risk of potential adverse consequences and potential side effects |
| Lack of administrative support and time available to manage the trial | Disruption to normal medication regimen |
| Slow and difficult recruitment of people | Prospect of receiving a placebo instead of the active drug |
| Lack of practical support | Upheaval and inconvenience to life that trial participation would cause |