Gene
therapy for Parkinson’s Disease is safe and some
patients benefit
Newswise — A novel gene
therapy technique is safe and may be effective
at staving off worsening symptoms of Parkinson's
disease, according to the first scientific
review of a dozen patients who have received the
treatment over the last three years. The results
were published in the latest issue of Lancet.
The patients, half of whom
live on Long Island, are in advanced stages of
the illness and were no longer responding to
medicines when they signed on for the
experimental therapy. The study was conducted by
Andrew Feigin, MD, director of Neuroscience
Experimental Therapeutics at The Feinstein
Institute for Medical Research and his
colleagues in collaboration with Parkinson’s
scientists at New York Presbyterian
Hospital-Weill Cornell Medical Center in
Manhattan.
One woman and 11 men
received a surgical infusion of fluid containing
a viral vector and genes for a protein called
GAD, glutamic acid decarboxylase. This enzyme is
critical in controlling a neurotransmitter
called GABA. In Parkinson’s, GABA is reduced in
an area of the brain called the subthalamic
nucleus. This region is working on overdrive in
the disease process and GABA is an inhibitory
transmitter and is important in trying to calm
this hyper-reactive circuit.
The gene therapy would
be used to reduce symptoms and not alter the
underlying disease process. Finding novel
therapies are key as many Parkinson’s
patients stop develop complications after
prolonged use of traditional medicines.
The Feinstein’s David
Eidelberg, MD, took brain scans before, during
and after the treatment and the scans show that
the brain is re-working these abnormal circuits.
Dr. Feigin said that patients had about a 27
percent improvement in symptoms, although the
study was an open label design. The scientists
are now designing a double-blind placebo
controlled trial that would enroll far more
patients in an attempt to see whether the gene
therapy is effective in reducing symptoms.
The patients' scans showed
a quieting of these areas, on the side of the
brain where the genes were infused. The study
was designed to inject the genes into one side
of the brain. Normally, Parkinson’s patients
have worsening symptoms on one side of the body.
The novel strategy included
packing genes that make an inhibitory chemical
called GABA into pieces of viruses that have
been rendered non-infectious. They began
studying the experimental treatment in
Parkinson’s patients in 2003. Some patients
continue to show improvement.
Parkinson's patients have
been willing to step up to the operating table
for relief from the tremors, stiffness and
rigidity that characterize the disease. Decades
ago, surgeons began to make lesions in parts of
the brain involved in the disease, which
lessened symptoms. Fetal stem cell surgery was
pioneered in Parkinson's patients. And in the
past decade, the deep brain stimulation has
worked in as many as 70 percent of patients who
have opted for the surgical procedure. If it
doesn't work, the electrodes can be removed. (By
comparison, it would be impossible to reverse
gene therapy.)
“Gene therapy could be a
more natural way to treat the disease,” said Dr.
Feigin. “This important study shows that gene
therapy can be performed safely and may benefits
patients.”
The gene therapy technique
was developed by Neurologix, a New Jersey-based
company.
Parkinson's is a movement
disorder caused by a progressive depletion of
the brain chemical dopamine in the substantia
nigra. These dopamine-containing cells control
movement. When 70 to 80 percent of these cells
are destroyed, a person develops the first
symptoms of disease: tremors, slowed movement,
muscle rigidity and problems with balance. The
main medication used in Parkinson's is L-dopa,
which replaces dopamine in cells that are still
working normally. Over time, the cell death is
so massive that the effects of the medication
disappear.
About The Feinstein
Institute for Medical Research Headquartered in
Manhasset, NY, and part of the North Shore-LIJ
Health System, The Feinstein Institute for
Medical Research is home to international
scientific leaders in Parkinson's disease,
Alzheimer’s disease, psychiatric disorders,
rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, sepsis,
inflammatory bowel disease, diabetes, human
genetics, leukemia, lymphoma, neuroimmunology,
and medicinal chemistry. Feinstein investigators
rank in the top 6th percentile of all grant
awards funded by the National Institutes of
Health. Feinstein Researchers are developing new
drugs and drug targets, and producing results
where science meets the patient. For more
information, please visit
http://www.FeinsteinInstitute.org.