Parkinsons Dis. 2012;2012:757305. Epub 2012 Mar 25.
Denyer R, Douglas MR.
Abstract
Current
pharmacological and surgical treatments for Parkinson's disease offer
symptomatic improvements to those suffering from this incurable
degenerative neurological disorder, but none of these has convincingly
shown effects on disease progression. Novel approaches based on gene
therapy have several potential advantages over conventional treatment
modalities. These could be used to provide more consistent dopamine
supplementation, potentially providing superior symptomatic relief with
fewer side effects. More radically, gene therapy could be used to
correct the imbalances in basal ganglia circuitry associated with the
symptoms of Parkinson's disease, or to preserve or restore dopaminergic
neurons lost during the disease process itself. The latter
neuroprotective approach is the most exciting, as it could
theoretically be disease modifying rather than simply symptom
alleviating. Gene therapy agents using these approaches are currently
making the transition from the laboratory to the bedside. This paper
summarises the theoretical approaches to gene therapy for Parkinson's
disease and the findings of clinical trials in this rapidly changing
field.
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