Current status of clinical trials of neural transplantation in Parkinson's disease

Author(s):  
Jonathan R. Evans ◽  
Sarah L. Mason ◽  
Roger A. Barker
1993 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
William J. Freed

Neural transplantation has been extensively applied in Parkinson's disease, including numerous clinical studies, studies in animal models, and related basic research on cell biology. There is evidence that the clinical trials of both adrenal medulla transplantation and fetal substantia nigra transplantation have produced a detectable clinical effect, although it is not yet clear whether the clinical benefit is sufficient to justify a more widespread application of these procedures. Studies of long-term outcome and quantitative tests are important in assaying the degree of benefit produced by transplantation procedures in Parkinson's disease and for developing improved and refined procedures. Other disease-related applications of neural transplantation are beginning to be developed. These include Huntington's disease, chronic pain, epilepsy, spinal cord injury, and perhaps even demyelinating diseases and cortical ischemic injury. Although most of these applications lie in the future, it is not too soon to begin to consider the scientific justification that should be required for initiation of human clinical trials.


Author(s):  
V. Mehta ◽  
J. Spears ◽  
I. Mendez

ABSTRACT:Parkinson's disease is a neurodegenerative disorder that affects about 1% of Canadians between the ages of fifty and seventy. The medical management for these patients consists of drug therapy that is initially effective but has limited long term benefits and does not alter the progressive course of the disease. The recalcitrance of longstanding Parkinson's disease to medical management has prompted the use of alternative surgical therapies. Many neurosurgical procedures have been utilized in order to improve the disabling symptoms these patients harbour. Although most of the current procedures involve making destructive lesions within various basal ganglia nuclei, neural transplantation attempts to reconstitute the normal nigrostriatal pathway and restore striatal dopamine. The initial success of neural transplantation in the rodent and primate parkinsonian models has led to its clinical application in the treatment of parkinsonian patients. Currently, well over one hundred patients throughout the world have been grafted with fetal tissue in an effort to ameliorate their parkinsonian symptoms. Although the results of neural transplantation in clinical trials are promising, a number of issues need to be resolved before this technology can become a standard treatment option. This review focuses on the current status of neural transplantation in Parkinson's disease within the context of other surgical therapies in current use.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Mark Tomishima ◽  
Agnete Kirkeby

After many years of preclinical development, cell and gene therapies have advanced from research tools in the lab to clinical-grade products for patients, and today they constitute more than a quarter of all new Phase I clinical trials for Parkinson’s disease. Whereas efficacy has been convincingly proven for many of these products in preclinical models, the field is now entering a new phase where the functionality and safety of these products will need to stand the test in clinical trials. If successful, these new products can have the potential to provide patients with a one-time administered treatment which may alleviate them from daily symptomatic dopaminergic medication.


2002 ◽  
Vol 7 (12) ◽  
pp. 674-682 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cesario V Borlongan ◽  
Paul R Sanberg

Neurology ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 60 (8) ◽  
pp. 1234-1240 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.M. Ravina ◽  
S.C. Fagan ◽  
R.G. Hart ◽  
C.A. Hovinga ◽  
D.D. Murphy ◽  
...  

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