第60回日本神経学会学術大会

セッション情報

シンポジウム

[S-24] Potential disease modifying therapies for Parkinson disease

2019年5月24日(金) 13:45 〜 15:45 第1会場 (大阪国際会議場5F 大ホール)

座長:武田 篤(国立病院機構仙台西多賀病院神経内科), 西岡 健弥(順天堂大学医学部脳神経内科)

The concept of “disease modification” encompasses intervention types ranging from those designed to slow the underlying degeneration to treatments aiming at compensating lost neuronal functions. It is the ultimate goal of Parkinson disease treatment, although all attempts to develop effective disease-modifying therapy have failed to date. Many reasons have been proposed for these failures including our poor understanding of disease pathogenesis and the lack of sensitive surrogate markers of PD. Moreover, several observations suggest that the PD is not a single disease, but syndrome based on a variety of pathophysiological mechanisms. However, recently several promising new approaches have been reported and attracted attentions. The aim of this symposium is to elucidate true possibilities and real limitations of such novel trials.

Seung-Jae Lee (Department of Biomedical Sciences, Seoul National University College of Medicine)

The concept of “disease modification” encompasses intervention types ranging from those designed to slow the underlying degeneration to treatments aiming at compensating lost neuronal functions. It is the ultimate goal of Parkinson disease treatment, although all attempts to develop effective disease-modifying therapy have failed to date. Many reasons have been proposed for these failures including our poor understanding of disease pathogenesis and the lack of sensitive surrogate markers of PD. Moreover, several observations suggest that the PD is not a single disease, but syndrome based on a variety of pathophysiological mechanisms. However, recently several promising new approaches have been reported and attracted attentions. The aim of this symposium is to elucidate true possibilities and real limitations of such novel trials.

Camille Carroll1,2 (1.University of Plymouth Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, 2.University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust)

The concept of “disease modification” encompasses intervention types ranging from those designed to slow the underlying degeneration to treatments aiming at compensating lost neuronal functions. It is the ultimate goal of Parkinson disease treatment, although all attempts to develop effective disease-modifying therapy have failed to date. Many reasons have been proposed for these failures including our poor understanding of disease pathogenesis and the lack of sensitive surrogate markers of PD. Moreover, several observations suggest that the PD is not a single disease, but syndrome based on a variety of pathophysiological mechanisms. However, recently several promising new approaches have been reported and attracted attentions. The aim of this symposium is to elucidate true possibilities and real limitations of such novel trials.

戸田 達史 (東京大学病院 神経内科)

The concept of “disease modification” encompasses intervention types ranging from those designed to slow the underlying degeneration to treatments aiming at compensating lost neuronal functions. It is the ultimate goal of Parkinson disease treatment, although all attempts to develop effective disease-modifying therapy have failed to date. Many reasons have been proposed for these failures including our poor understanding of disease pathogenesis and the lack of sensitive surrogate markers of PD. Moreover, several observations suggest that the PD is not a single disease, but syndrome based on a variety of pathophysiological mechanisms. However, recently several promising new approaches have been reported and attracted attentions. The aim of this symposium is to elucidate true possibilities and real limitations of such novel trials.

馬場 徹 (仙台西多賀病院 脳神経内科)

The concept of “disease modification” encompasses intervention types ranging from those designed to slow the underlying degeneration to treatments aiming at compensating lost neuronal functions. It is the ultimate goal of Parkinson disease treatment, although all attempts to develop effective disease-modifying therapy have failed to date. Many reasons have been proposed for these failures including our poor understanding of disease pathogenesis and the lack of sensitive surrogate markers of PD. Moreover, several observations suggest that the PD is not a single disease, but syndrome based on a variety of pathophysiological mechanisms. However, recently several promising new approaches have been reported and attracted attentions. The aim of this symposium is to elucidate true possibilities and real limitations of such novel trials.