Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT06156917

Evaluation of Autonomic, Imaging and Genetic Markers for Parkinson-related Dementia : Longitudinal Assessment of a PD Cohort.

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
100 (actual)
Sponsor
IRCCS San Raffaele · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
40 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers

Summary

Neuropathologically, Parkinson disease (PD) is characterized by the accumulation of intra-neuronal protein aggregates (Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites). It is believed that altered rt-synuclein protein handling plays a key role in the etiopathogenesis of PD, because it is the principal component of Lewy pathology. Recent evidence now suggests the possibility that a-synuclein is a prion-like protein and that PD is a prion-like disease. Some studies have suggested that environmental toxins promote the release of a-synuclein by enter- ic neurons and that released enteric a-synuclein is taken up by presynaptic sympathetic neurites and retro- gradely transported to the soma, where it accumulates, thus mediating the progression of PD pathology. These data indicate the precocity of autonomic nervous system involvement with reference to further spread of a-synuclein pathology. We have evidence from a previous study that the vagal preganglionic pro- jections to the gut express a-synuclein, thus providing a candidate a-synuclein-expressing pathway for the retrograde transport of pathogens to the central nervous system. Cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction explores the reactivity of sympathetic and parasympathetic pathways to a predefined set of tests, allowing to quantify the degree of dysfunction in each of the two components of the autonomic nervous system. Mutations in the GBA gene influence the risk for dementia in PD 21; this effect of GBA is not synergistic with that of increasing age. Heterozygous GBA mutations are considered an important risk factor for PD and dementia, possibly causing a wider protein accumulation in the brain. In vitro models of alpha-synuclein aggregation have provided evidence for co-localization with mutant GBA . It has been proposed that a gain of function mechanism operates in patients with PD carrying GBA gene mutations, whereby mutant G8A promotes alpha-synuclein aggregation, accelerating Lewy body formation and neuronal loss. Each of the selected variables provides a unique window to ascertain the association between PD patho- physiology and the risk of related dementia. Our hypothesis is that PD patients who develop incident dementia will have a number of statistically different abnormalities that will be evidenced as individual predictors and will also be assembled into a predictive algorithm. This project addresses a key issue in Parkinson disease, a progressive neurodegenerative condition, related to the assessment of variables associated to the development of dementia. The project is focused on dementia as a significant and important clinical milestone that constitutes the main cause of non-reversible functional impairment in PD patients.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTdiagnostic accuracyAims of the present project are: to investigate the relationship between incident PD dementia and multimodal parameters as cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction, altered cerebral glucose metabolism, and genetic biomarkers; development of an algorithm predictive for PD-related dementia, combining the rele- vant multidimensional parameters under study; longitudinal follow-up of clinical and cognitive status in PD patients with and without dementia along four years.

Timeline

Start date
2018-09-01
Primary completion
2020-09-01
Completion
2020-09-01
First posted
2023-12-05
Last updated
2023-12-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06156917. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.