Spinocerebellar ataxias: prospects and challenges for therapy development

T Ashizawa, G Öz, HL Paulson - Nature Reviews Neurology, 2018 - nature.com
T Ashizawa, G Öz, HL Paulson
Nature Reviews Neurology, 2018nature.com
The spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) comprise more than 40 autosomal dominant
neurodegenerative disorders that present principally with progressive ataxia. Within the past
few years, studies of pathogenic mechanisms in the SCAs have led to the development of
promising therapeutic strategies, especially for SCAs caused by polyglutamine-coding CAG
repeats. Nucleotide-based gene-silencing approaches that target the first steps in the
pathogenic cascade are one promising approach not only for polyglutamine SCAs but also …
Abstract
The spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) comprise more than 40 autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorders that present principally with progressive ataxia. Within the past few years, studies of pathogenic mechanisms in the SCAs have led to the development of promising therapeutic strategies, especially for SCAs caused by polyglutamine-coding CAG repeats. Nucleotide-based gene-silencing approaches that target the first steps in the pathogenic cascade are one promising approach not only for polyglutamine SCAs but also for the many other SCAs caused by toxic mutant proteins or RNA. For these and other emerging therapeutic strategies, well-coordinated preparation is needed for fruitful clinical trials. To accomplish this goal, investigators from the United States and Europe are now collaborating to share data from their respective SCA cohorts. Increased knowledge of the natural history of SCAs, including of the premanifest and early symptomatic stages of disease, will improve the prospects for success in clinical trials of disease-modifying drugs. In addition, investigators are seeking validated clinical outcome measures that demonstrate responsiveness to changes in SCA populations. Findings suggest that MRI and magnetic resonance spectroscopy biomarkers will provide objective biological readouts of disease activity and progression, but more work is needed to establish disease-specific biomarkers that track target engagement in therapeutic trials. Together, these efforts suggest that the development of successful therapies for one or more SCAs is not far away.
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