New drug may slow rapid progression of Parkinson's disease

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Image by Annick Vanblaere from Pixabay
Image by Annick Vanblaere from Pixabay

A drug called prasinezumab may slow signs of motor deterioration in people with rapidly progressing Parkinson’s Disease, according to an re-analysis of data from a large clinical trial by international researchers. The drug is designed to bind to a protein called alpha-synuclein, which is known to accumulate in the brain of Parkinson’s patients, and allow it to be broken down. The original trial found no meaningful effect on disease progression, but after analysing the data again, the authors of the current study noticed some participants had a form of Parkinson’s that progressed more rapidly than others. Once they split the data to analyse the drug’s effect on slowly- and rapidly-progressing Parkinson’s, they found prasinezumab treatment reduced the decline in motor symptoms in all rapidly progressing participants after a year, compared with a non-active placebo. The findings suggest the drug could be more effective in those with rapidly-progressing Parkinson’s, but additionally, further research may reveal that slow-progressing patients also see an effect after a longer treatment duration, the team adds.

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From: Springer Nature

Medical research: Antibody may slow Parkinson’s motor progression in some patients

Prasinezumab, a monoclonal antibody, is shown to reduce signs of motor deterioration in individuals with Parkinson’s disease (PD) who have rapidly progressing disease, as reported in an exploratory analysis of data from a large phase 2 clinical trial published in Nature Medicine.

There are currently no disease-modifying treatments for PD, a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by worsening of both motor and non-motor symptoms over time. Aggregation of alpha-synuclein in the brain is a hallmark of PD, and several preclinical studies have suggested that this pathology is a key driver of disease progression. Prasinezumab is the first experimental therapeutic monoclonal antibody designed to bind aggregated alpha-synuclein, allowing it to be degraded. The antibody was recently investigated in 316 patients with early-stage PD in the phase 2 PASADENA clinical trial, but was found to have no meaningful effect on disease progression in this cohort. However, participants in the trial had highly variable disease progression.

Gennaro Pagano and colleagues analyzed the potential effects of prasinezumab on motor progression in four pre-specified subpopulations who had rapidly progressing motor symptoms in the phase 2 PASADENA trial. These rapidly progressing subgroups were defined by the use of monoamine oxidase B (MAO-B) inhibitors at baseline, the staging of their disease on the Hoehn and Yahr scale, the presence of rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder, or the presence of diffuse malignant phenotypes. Researchers found that prasinezumab treatment reduced motor symptom worsening in all rapidly progressing subpopulations after 52 weeks, compared with the motor symptoms of those treated with a placebo. This effect was not seen in treated subpopulations characterized as slow progressors. Assessment of motor symptoms was done using part III of the Movement Disorder Society Unified PD rating scale (MDS-UPDRS), which is the standard clinical assessment tool for quantifying motor symptoms in PD.

These findings suggest that the clinical efficacy of prasinezumab is seen only at one year in treated patients with rapidly progressing PD. Further research is needed to determine if prasinezumab may be effective in patients with slower progression of disease after longer treatment duration periods; this is being explored in an extended open-label phase of the PASEDENA trial. Further trials are also needed to confirm these effects in patients with rapidly progressing PD, and this is currently being investigated in a large phase 2 trial (the PADOVA study).

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conference:
Nature Medicine
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Roche Innovation Center Basel, Switzerland
Funder: The study is sponsored by F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd was involved in the study design, collection, analysis, interpretation of data, the writing of this article and the decision to submit it for publication. We thank the patients and their families who participated in the study and the clinical investigators. Editorial assistance for this manuscript was provided by mXm Medical Communications funded by F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. See paper for competing interests.
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