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Chemistry
& Industry Magazine
First Parkinson's Gene Therapy Patient Passes One Year
The first ever patient to have undergone gene therapy for Parkinson's
appears to have come through phase I without a hitch, suggesting that
the therapy is safe and effective, reports Marina Murphy in Chemistry
& Industry.
'We have yet to analyse efficacy data, with the seventh of the planned
twelve subjects only just having undergone gene transfer. . . But there
have been no adverse effects related to the gene therapy so far,' said
lead researcher Matthew During, of the
University
of
Auckland
. He continues, 'Our therapy is extremely safe and we hope there will be
some symptomatic improvement.'
It is just over a year since the first patient, Nathan Klein, had a
virus carrying a gene injected in a part of his brain. He claims to have
experienced an improvement of 40-60% in overall symptoms when he is on
his medication, and a 10-20% improvement when he is not. Prior to the
surgery, he habitually suffered from a tremor on his right side.
Roger Barker, a Parkinson's expert at the University of Cambridge, who
was critical of the decision to go ahead with the trial, said the fact
that there has been no adverse effects is good news, but because the
patient is on low doses of his medication, it is not possible to
determine whether the gene therapy is any better than a more aggressive
drug regime, or subthalamic nucleus (STN) deep brain stimulation.
The treatment uses a harmless virus to introduce a gene into a part of
the brain that is overactive in Parkinson's patients, causing jerky
movements. Introducing this gene leads to the production natural
chemicals that inhibit
the overactive brain cells. During's group is the only one conducting
human gene therapy trials in Parkinson's and experts think that gene
therapy is 20 years ahead of stem-cell therapy for Parkinson's disease.
Phase II should start at the beginning of 2005.
(4/9/04)
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