Continuing the
Work on Parkinson’s Research
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Special Note: We are happy to congratulate the dedicated scientists at the Udall
Parkinson’s Disease Research Center at the University of Kentucky for receiving
a new NIH grant to study GDNF. At the same time readers should be aware that
this grant is for
animal research.
It will not help the GDNF trial participants in their campaign to have their
treatments reinstated. It doesn’t restart other human research. The researchers
predict 5 years before they could resume human trials.
Some news reports have not included the fact that the grant only funds animal
research, and may have misled some readers to think the GDNF trial participants
would be able to again receive their treatments.
Please read the entire article:
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FROM: University of Kentucky News
http://news.uky.edu/news/display_article.php?category=0&artid=553&type=1
Media Contact: Allison Elliott
aelli4@email.uky.edu
(859) 323-6363
LEXINGTON, Ky.
(Sept. 13, 2005)
− The University
of Kentucky Morris K. Udall Parkinson’s Disease Research Center of Excellence
has been awarded nearly $6 million from National Institutes of Health and
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke to continue work on the
promising drug glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) and similar
compounds.
Greg Gerhardt, Ph.D., professor, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology and
Department of Neurology, director of the Morris K. Udall Parkinson’s Disease
Research Center of Excellence, and director of the Center for Sensor Technology,
has headed the Udall Center at UK since its inception six years ago. As one of
only 12 Udall Centers in the nation, UK’s center represents the leading edge of
research into Parkinson’s disease, which at this point remains an incurable
condition. GDNF differs from other Parkinson’s therapies in that it has
demonstrated potential to halt or perhaps reverse the neurodegenerative
condition. Current treatments only provide temporary relief from symptoms.
"The NINDS is pleased to continue the support of the University of Kentucky
Udall Center, a unique component of the Udall center program that provides
non-human primate studies of potential therapeutics in Parkinson's disease,"
said Diane Murphy, Ph.D., Program Director for the NINDS' Morris K. Udall
Parkinson's Disease Research Centers of Excellence.
Gerhardt and colleagues will spend the next five years investigating potential
negative effects of GDNF, and how to fine tune dosing and administration
techniques to make the therapy a safer and more viable alternative.
The $6 million funding from NIH represents a vote of confidence for the UK Udall
Center and its work to date on GDNF and related molecules. At the end of this
five-year funding cycle UK researchers plan to be ready to move GDNF or a
related compound once again into human clinical trials – a timetable considered
ambitious by industry standards, but realistic to Gerhardt.
UK’s research into GDNF made headlines recently when the CBS news show “60
Minutes” broadcast a feature on the controversy that arose when Kentucky and New
York patients enrolled in a national Phase 1 clinical trial for the drug were
left without medical treatment or legal recourse when Amgen, Inc., the biotech
firm that holds the patent for GDNF, suddenly withdrew the drug from testing
amidst allegations of safety and efficacy concerns.
Amgen’s own bioethicist told CBS that the decision was largely a result of a
nervous pharmaceutical industry haunted by the specter of the Vioxx lawsuits.
CBS also uncovered video footage in which an Amgen executive stated that the
treatment in its current incarnation, a complex procedure involving deep brain
surgery, would not be a money maker for the corporation. Shortly after halting
the trial and withdrawing all GDNF treatment from patients, Amgen applied for a
new patent on a different form of GDNF that could potentially be delivered in a
more economical capsule form.
Despite the requests of investigators, the pleas of patients and the approval of
the Food and Drug Administration, Amgen has refused to provide the drug under
compassionate use guidelines to those patients who had undergone surgery to
implant a pump and catheter in their brains, and had been receiving GDNF
successfully for as long as two years. Court cases in Kentucky and New York have
been dismissed and appeals are being considered.
While distinctly troubled by the plight of patients caught in the crossfire of
the first GDNF trials, Gerhardt says Parkinson’s researchers are far from giving
up all hope in GDNF. He continues to work with the drug in animal models, and to
explore similar molecules to which Amgen does not possess patent rights. By
exploring multiple paths of research at once, Gerhardt and his colleagues are
applying the old maxim “don’t put all your eggs in one basket,” to the newest
science imaginable.
“History is riddled with examples of technology that failed more than once
before being perfected. The Wright brothers crashed a few airplanes. GDNF has
not failed so spectacularly, although we still have much to learn about it.
We’re going to spend the next five years studying the technology and how to
translate it into clinical use in patients,” said Gerhardt.
The GDNF trial launched at UK in 2002, and was headed by principal investigator
John Slevin, M.D., professor in the UK Department of Neurology and Department of
Pharmacology and director of the Movement Disorders Clinic at UK; Gerhardt; Don
Gash, Ph.D., the UK Alumni Chair in Anatomy and Neurobiology, professor in the
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, and director of the M. Margrite
Davis-Ralph E. Mills Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Spectroscopy Center at UK;
Byron Young, M.D., the Johnston-Wright Endowed Chair of Surgery, professor,
Department of Surgery, and chief, Division of Neurosurgery, associate dean for
Clinical Affairs, and chief of staff, UK Hospital. Ten patients participated in
the trial through UK, joining approximately 40 others in the United States and
the United Kingdom.
Written by: Allison Elliott
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