Article

Genetic Variants May Predict Response to Parkinson's Disease Treatment

Genetics could affect response to treatment for patients with Parkinson’s disease.

Researchers in a recent study found a genetic variant that can potentially cause treatment-failure in patients with Parkinson’s disease.

Response to treatment with rasagiline for Parkinson’s disease is typically not good in the early stages of the disease, but for a previously unexplained reason, subsides over time. Researchers in the study, published in Nature Reviews Neurology, examined genetic data from 692 patients from the ADAGIO clinical trial for rasagiline.

They were able to discover 2 variants that improved responses to the medication in the early stages of the disease where treatment response is typically not good.

"Genetic studies of drug response are often based only on memory of the response rather than systematically recorded data. These findings need to be interpreted with caution, as in all studies replication is needed,” concluded senior study author Joanne Knight, PhD. “However, we hope that such studies will encourage other companies to make data from clinical trials available to researchers."

Newsletter

Stay informed on drug updates, treatment guidelines, and pharmacy practice trends—subscribe to Pharmacy Times for weekly clinical insights.

Related Videos
Image credit: Sebastian Kaulitzki | stock.adobe.com
1 expert is featured in this series.
Magnified bone marrow biopsy showing plasma cells with irregular nuclei and multiple myeloma tumor cells infiltrating normal hematopoietic tissue
Health and nutrition: the role of glp-1 in diabetes management with apple and syringe - Image credit: Thanayut | stock.adobe.com
5 experts in this video
5 experts in this video