Apr 17, 2007 11:08 am US/Central
Study Drills Holes In Parkinson's Patients' Skulls
WASHINGTON (AP) ―
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Image of a brain is studied as part of Parkinson's Disease research. (File)
KDKA
The first dozen Parkinson's patients to have holes drilled in their skulls for a novel gene therapy attempt weren't harmed and hints at some improvement have researchers embarking on a larger study to see if the treatment really may work. Doctors reported initial results of the closely watched experiment at a neurology meeting Monday, but cautioned that it's far too soon to raise hopes.
At issue: Using a nerve growth factor to try to rescue dying brain cells.
Some 1.5 million Americans have Parkinson's, a disease that gradually destroys brain cells that produce dopamine, a chemical crucial for the cellular signaling that controls muscle movement. Too little dopamine causes increasingly severe tremors and periodically stiff or frozen limbs.
Standard treatments can control tremors for a while but can't stop the disease's inevitable march. So scientists are hunting ways to protect remaining dopamine-producing neurons, and rescue dying ones.
Previous attempts with growth factors haven't panned out. The new approach uses gene therapy injecting a virus that carries a gene that in turn produces the growth factor neurturin to try to get the protective protein right where it's needed.
None of the first 12 patients to undergo the experiment at the University of California, San Francisco and Chicago's Rush University Hospital suffered serious side effects, UCSF neurosurgeon Dr. Philip Starr reported Monday.
A year after treatment, three patients showed no difference on a standard rating scale of movement. But the other nine showed a 38 percent improvement, Starr told a meeting of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons.
That doesn't mean the therapy worked, Starr cautioned. It could have been coincidence; some previous attempts found similar hints of effectiveness, only to fail when put to more rigorous testing.
But the results were encouraging enough that researchers are enrolling more Parkinson's sufferers 56 of them for the next stage of testing. A third of those patients will undergo sham surgery, getting the holes drilled in their skulls but no gene-carrying virus, to try to tease out whether the therapy really works.
California-based Ceregene Inc. sponsored the research.
(© 2007 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
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