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      Harnessing Cerebrospinal Fluid Biomarkers in Clinical Trials for Treating Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Diseases: Potential and Challenges

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          Abstract

          No disease-modifying therapies (DMT) for neurodegenerative diseases (NDs) have been established, particularly for Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Parkinson's disease (PD). It is unclear why candidate drugs that successfully demonstrate therapeutic effects in animal models fail to show disease-modifying effects in clinical trials. To overcome this hurdle, patients with homogeneous pathologies should be detected as early as possible. The early detection of AD patients using sufficiently tested biomarkers could demonstrate the potential usefulness of combining biomarkers with clinical measures as a diagnostic tool. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers for NDs are being incorporated in clinical trials designed with the aim of detecting patients earlier, evaluating target engagement, collecting homogeneous patients, facilitating prevention trials, and testing the potential of surrogate markers relative to clinical measures. In this review we summarize the latest information on CSF biomarkers in NDs, particularly AD and PD, and their use in clinical trials. The large number of issues related to CSF biomarker measurements and applications has resulted in relatively few clinical trials on CSF biomarkers being conducted. However, the available CSF biomarker data obtained in clinical trials support the advantages of incorporating CSF biomarkers in clinical trials, even though the data have mostly been obtained in AD trials. We describe the current issues with and ongoing efforts for the use of CSF biomarkers in clinical trials and the plans to harness CSF biomarkers for the development of DMT and clinical routines. This effort requires nationwide, global, and multidisciplinary efforts in academia, industry, and regulatory agencies to facilitate a new era.

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          Most cited references46

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          Targeting chelatable iron as a therapeutic modality in Parkinson's disease.

          The pathophysiological role of iron in Parkinson's disease (PD) was assessed by a chelation strategy aimed at reducing oxidative damage associated with regional iron deposition without affecting circulating metals. Translational cell and animal models provided concept proofs and a delayed-start (DS) treatment paradigm, the basis for preliminary clinical assessments. For translational studies, we assessed the effect of oxidative insults in mice systemically prechelated with deferiprone (DFP) by following motor functions, striatal dopamine (HPLC and MRI-PET), and brain iron deposition (relaxation-R2*-MRI) aided by spectroscopic measurements of neuronal labile iron (with fluorescence-sensitive iron sensors) and oxidative damage by markers of protein, lipid, and DNA modification. DFP significantly reduced labile iron and biological damage in oxidation-stressed cells and animals, improving motor functions while raising striatal dopamine. For a pilot, double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial, early-stage Parkinson's patients on stabilized dopamine regimens enrolled in a 12-month single-center study with DFP (30 mg/kg/day). Based on a 6-month DS paradigm, early-start patients (n=19) compared to DS patients (n=18) (37/40 completed) responded significantly earlier and sustainably to treatment in both substantia nigra iron deposits (R2* MRI) and Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale motor indicators of disease progression (p<0.03 and p<0.04, respectively). Apart from three rapidly resolved neutropenia cases, safety was maintained throughout the trial. A moderate iron chelation regimen that avoids changes in systemic iron levels may constitute a novel therapeutic modality for PD. The therapeutic features of a chelation modality established in translational models and in pilot clinical trials warrant comprehensive evaluation of symptomatic and/or disease-modifying potential of chelation in PD.
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            Cell biology of protein misfolding: the examples of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases.

            The salutary intersection of fundamental cell biology with the study of disease is well illustrated by the emerging elucidation of neurodegenerative disorders. Novel mechanisms in cell biology have been uncovered through disease-orientated research; for example, the discovery of presenilin as an intramembrane aspartyl protease that processes many diverse proteins within the lipid bilayer. A common theme has arisen in this field: normally-soluble proteins accumulate, misfold and oligomerize, inducing cytotoxic effects that are particularly devastating in the post-mitotic milieu of the neuron.
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              Phase 3 solanezumab trials: Secondary outcomes in mild Alzheimer's disease patients.

              EXPEDITION and EXPEDITION2 were identically designed placebo-controlled phase 3 studies assessing effects of solanezumab, an antiamyloid monoclonal antibody binding soluble amyloid-β peptide, on cognitive and functional decline over 80 weeks in patients with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's disease (AD). Primary findings for both studies have been published.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Clin Neurol
                J Clin Neurol
                JCN
                Journal of Clinical Neurology (Seoul, Korea)
                Korean Neurological Association
                1738-6586
                2005-5013
                October 2016
                30 September 2016
                : 12
                : 4
                : 381-392
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of Pharmacology and Medicinal Toxicology Research Center, Incheon, Korea.
                [b ]Hypoxia-Related Diseases Research Center, Inha University School of Medicine, Incheon, Korea.
                [c ]Department of Thoracic Surgery, Inha University Hospital, Inha University, Incheon, Korea.
                [d ]Department of Emergency Medicine, Inje University Ilsan Paik Hospital, Goyang, Korea.
                Author notes
                Correspondence: Ju-Hee Kang, MD, PhD. Department of Pharmacology and Medicinal Toxicology Research Center, Inha University School of Medicine, Inha University, 100 Inha-ro, Nam-gu, Incheon 22212, Korea. Tel +82-32-860-9872, Fax +82-32-887-7488, johykang@ 123456inha.ac.kr

                *These authors contributed equally to this work.

                Article
                10.3988/jcn.2016.12.4.381
                5063862
                27819412
                288f907b-a67b-46c5-8f83-906ce645b053
                Copyright © 2016 Korean Neurological Association

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 21 November 2015
                : 28 March 2016
                : 29 March 2016
                Funding
                Funded by: National Research Foundation of Korea, CrossRef http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100003725;
                Award ID: 2014009392
                Award ID: 2014M3C7A1064752
                Funded by: Inha University, CrossRef http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002635;
                Categories
                Review

                Neurology
                cerebrospinal fluid,alzheimer's disease,parkinson's disease,biomarker,clinical trial,disease-modifying therapy

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