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Thursday, August 2, 2007
Gene therapy success for Parkinson's patients
The first attempt to treat Parkinson's disease with gene therapy reduced
symptoms by as much as 70%, researchers say.
Patients received single injections into their brains of a harmless virus
that delivered genes to relieve the condition.

"There was a 25% to 30% improvement in the symptoms of all recipients," says
Matthew During at Cornell University in New York, US, who led the team that
carried out the experimental procedure on 11 men and one woman. Some
patients on higher doses did even better, with improvements of up to 70%.

"We must be cautious, but we're very encouraged by these results," says
During. "It's one of the biggest successes of gene therapy so far."

The team injected the viruses into a part of the brain called the
subthalamic nucleus, which becomes overactive in patients with Parkinson's
disease.
Gene delivery

Such overactivity puts strain on neurons that produce the neurotransmitter
dopamine, which is vital for movement control. As a result, patients with
Parkinson's disease have depleted dopamine levels.

One reason the subthalamic nucleus is overactive is that it underproduces
another neurotransmitter called gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA).

To redress this and dampen activity in the subthalamic nucleus, During used
harmless, cold-like viruses to deliver genes that ramp up the production of
GABA. These extra genes code for an enzyme that converts the amino acid
glutamate into GABA.

The team injected the patients' subthalamic nuclei directly, using a drop of
fluid containing up to 35 billion viral particles.

Only one hemisphere of the patients' brains received the treatment - each
hemisphere controls movement in the opposite side of the body, so the
untreated half of the brain would act as a control to determine how
successful the therapy was.
Unforeseen benefits

The effects of the treatment became apparent about three months after the
injections about three months after the injections, mainly producing
improvements in the expected side of the body. But to the researchers'
surprise, there were also improvements in the side of the body corresponding
to the untreated hemisphere too.

"It is now four years since the first patient was treated, and he's now
riding his bike," says During. "When we first met him, he couldn't even hold
a glass of water."

During says that such a simple, one-off procedure has advantages over deep
brain stimulation, a widely-used electro-mechanical method of dampening
activity in the subthalamic nucleus.

In this process, patients are implanted with electrodes that control the
brain region by delivering electrical impulses. But these have
complications, such as infections associated with the implant, batteries
running out of power, and the physical inconvenience of electrical leads.
Placebo effect?

Others are sceptical of the team's findings. "I think there is sufficient
promise that a proper trial of this technique is justified," says Jon
Stoessl, who scans the brains of Parkinson's patients at the University of
British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. "But how do they know the virus stays
in the areas they want?"

Stoessl acknowledges that the symptoms did improve, but says that patients
with Parkinson's disease are notoriously prone to placebo effects, showing
improved symptoms simply because they have high expectations of treatment.

Stoessl also speculates that dampening, or damage to the subthalamic
nucleus, might have the side-effect of damaging the known function of this
area of the brain in learning. He says that this criticism would apply
equally to deep brain stimulation.

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
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