• Login
    View Item 
    •   DSpace Home
    • Centro Académico de Salud (CAS)
    • Hospital Universitario Austral -HUA-
    • Investigación Aplicada
    • View Item
    •   DSpace Home
    • Centro Académico de Salud (CAS)
    • Hospital Universitario Austral -HUA-
    • Investigación Aplicada
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Browse

    All of DSpaceCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

    My Account

    LoginRegister

    Statistics

    View Usage Statistics

    Biomarker-driven phenotyping in Parkinson's disease: A translational missing link in disease-modifying clinical trials.

    Thumbnail
    View/Open
    IA - Espay (763.3Kb)
    Date
    2017-02-24
    Author
    Espay, Alberto J.
    Schwarzschild, Michael A.
    Tanner, Caroline M.
    Fernandez, Hubert
    Simon, David K.
    Leverenz, James B.
    Merola, Aristide.
    et al.
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Past clinical trials of putative neuroprotective therapies have targeted PD as a single pathogenic disease entity. From an Oslerian clinicopathological perspective, the wide complexity of PD converges into Lewy bodies and justifies a reductionist approach to PD: A single-mechanism therapy can affect most of those sharing the classic pathological hallmark. From a systems-biology perspective, PD is a group of disorders that, while related by sharing the feature of nigral dopamine-neuron degeneration, exhibit unique genetic, biological, and molecular abnormalities, which probably respond differentially to a given therapeutic approach, particularly for strategies aimed at neuroprotection. Under this model, only biomarker-defined, homogenous subtypes of PD are likely to respond optimally to therapies proven to affect the biological processes within each subtype. Therefore, we suggest that precision medicine applied to PD requires a reevaluation of the biomarker-discovery effort. This effort is currently centered on correlating biological measures to clinical features of PD and on identifying factors that predict whether various prodromal states will convert into the classical movement disorder. We suggest, instead, that subtyping of PD requires the reverse view, where abnormal biological signals (i.e., biomarkers), rather than clinical definitions, are used to define disease phenotypes. Successful development of disease-modifying strategies will depend on how relevant the specific biological processes addressed by an intervention are to the pathogenetic mechanisms in the subgroup of targeted patients. This precision-medicine approach will likely yield smaller, but well-defined, subsets of PD amenable to successful neuroprotection.
    URI
    https://riu.austral.edu.ar/handle/123456789/790
    Collections
    • Investigación Aplicada

    xmlui.dri2xhtml.structural.info-link
    Licencia Creative Commons
    xmlui.dri2xhtml.structural.contact-link1 - xmlui.dri2xhtml.structural.contact-link2
    xmlui.dri2xhtml.structural.info-link2
     

     


    xmlui.dri2xhtml.structural.info-link
    Licencia Creative Commons
    xmlui.dri2xhtml.structural.contact-link1 - xmlui.dri2xhtml.structural.contact-link2
    xmlui.dri2xhtml.structural.info-link2