Obiettivo
There are currently no cures for Parkinson's disease (PD) but one of the most effective reparative therapies in patients to date has been with allotransplants of dopamine (DA) neuroblasts obtained from fetal ventral mesencephalic (VM) tissue. However, this cell transplantation approach has given inconsistent results, with some patients doing extremely well and coming off anti-PD medication for years, whilst others have shown no or only modest clinical improvements, and in some cases also developed severe, off-state graft-induced dyskinesias (GIDs). The reasons behind this heterogeneity of outcomes, and the emergence of GIDs in particular, need to be better understood, not least in the perspective of the rapid advances that are now being made in the development of stem-cell based therapies. There is therefore an urgent need to revisit the trials that have already been done with fetal VM tissue in PD patients, with the expectation that a critical reassessment can form the basis for an optimised and more standardised procedure that will translate into more consistently efficacious transplants with minimal side-effects. Over the last two years a group of international experts, including the key investigators of the previous European and North American trials, has been re-examining the outcome of these trials as well as reviewing the results obtained from recent and ongoing animal experimental studies, and identified a number of weaknesses that may explain the inconsistent outcome in previous trials. As a result of these discussions, the group has agreed to join forces in a new round of experimental work and cell therapy trials in PD, based on a new jointly developed protocol where all these factors are taken into account. In the first instance fetal VM tissue containing mesencephalic DA neuroblasts will be used, with the expectation that this will pave the way for bigger trials using dopaminergic neurons derived from stem cells.
Campo scientifico
Not validated
Not validated
Invito a presentare proposte
FP7-HEALTH-2009-single-stage
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Meccanismo di finanziamento
CP-IP - Large-scale integrating projectCoordinatore
CB2 1TN Cambridge
Regno Unito
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Partecipanti (14)
22100 LUND
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CF24 0DE Cardiff
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SW7 2AZ LONDON
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WC1E 6BT LONDON
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79106 Freiburg
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1070 vienna
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75012 Paris
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75654 Paris
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Partecipazione conclusa
BA2 9ER BATH
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PA4 9RF Paisley
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79331 Teningen
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CB25 9TU Cambridge
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291 89 Kristianstad
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W12 0NN LONDON
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