Irish Daily Mirror

Welcome to the house of hope

Hi-tech living laboratory sets out to conquer Parkinson’s Disease

- EXCLUSIVE BY DANNY BUCKLAND IN NEW YORK

THE classic white clapboard and gleaming windows of the elegant home are straight from the pages of a glossy property magazine. But this suburban house, surrounded by manicured lawns, is wired to beat the scourge of Parkinson’s Disease.

Behind the front door, everything from fridge handles and kitchen cupboards to armchairs and a double bed are fitted with sensors that respond to subtle changes in movement in patients – a crucial indicator in Parkinson’s.

The three-bedroom property is stacked with pressure sensors, motion cameras and computer networks that hum with activity around the clock in a revolution­ary project to decode the neurodegen­erative disorder.

This is the house of hope, a unique living laboratory where Parkinson’s Disease (PD) patients will stay and have their everyday activities monitored to generate data on how their disease is progressin­g, or how they respond to novel drugs being developed to treat the condition.

Patients – who could stay for days or weeks depending on various trials – will generate data that could help develop disease-halting drugs and advance technology that could be used at home so that people with Parkinson’s can retain their independen­ce.

It could also herald new equipment for earlier diagnosis and boost the ability of GPS to identify symptoms that are often mistakenly attributed to ageing.

Patients wear sensors and are filmed by cameras mounted on walls or on tripods as they go about daily life – reading, making a drink or meal and walking around the property. Measuremen­ts from 25 joint movements track gait, grip, speed and tiny changes in routine, transmitti­ng the data wirelessly to a command suite just off the entrance hall.

The multi-million-pound Bluesky Project – a collaborat­ion between industry giants Pfizer and IBM – is ready to accept its first patient on a clinical trial at the house in upstate New York, USA.

But the project is driven by emotional as well as technologi­cal imperative­s as the leading clinicians involved all have family members whose lives were blighted by Parkinson’s.

Ajay Royyuru, vice-president healthcare and life sciences IBM Research, revealed that a female relative had struggled with the condition: “It is an unrelentin­g disease. Every day, minute by minute, they get no relief and my relative has gone through quite a bit,” he says.

“She now deals with it well but when I look at the work we are doing here I feel we have a chance to make a big difference for people like her.”

Jeremy Rice, principal researcher and senior manager at IBM Research, revealed that his 83-year-old father Roger was diagnosed with Parkinson’s two years ago.

“This is very personal for me,” he says. “It is a scary thing and if you go to the doctor every six months with your Parkinson’s, it is very episodic so it would be reassuring to be able to track it continuous­ly.

“The project excites me because there is so much that technology can assist people with and make their lives better. This is very important to us.

“Our work gives tremendous hope for Parkinson’s and also other cognitive conditions such as Alzheimer’s if we can broaden the technology in the future.”

PD is a progressiv­e condition, caused by a lack of the brainsigna­lling chemical dopamine, which has five sub-types and 30 separate genetic factors at play.

It is a curse to around 12,000 people and their families in the Ireland and 10 million worldwide.

There is no cure and the gold standard medication, Levodopa, was introduced 50 years ago. A study recently warned that PD numbers could double by 2025 because of our ageing .

Its personal payload is devastatin­g with extensive symptoms including tremors and slow movement, pain, anxiety, depression, sleep disturbanc­e, bladder problems, sexual dysfunctio­n and an inability to lead an independen­t life.

It has been described as a living death.

Comedian Sir Billy Connolly has been living with it since 2013 and singer Neil Diamond ended his 50th anniversar­y tour in January because of his advancing Parkinson’s.

The best available medication only treats the symptoms, becoming less effective over time, and trials of new drugs have been hampered by the inability to define condition changes that vary from person to person. “It is a family disease,” said Peter Bergethon, Pfizer’s head of quantitati­ve medicine. “It is slow, insidious and people

who develop it are often in the prime of their life or their golden years as they slowly lose the capacity to move easily and live that life.

“They have to think about every step they take. They start to shake and cannot do daily things like doing up buttons or tying shoelaces. There is an ever-present fear of what is happening to them and the first things that go are what people do together.

“Couples who danced can no longer dance, those that walked together are denied that pleasure and the family becomes trapped in this web of going slower and not being able to do too much The property, originally the early 19th built in the early 19th century but swallowed

Our work gives tremendous hope for patients if we can broaden the technology in the future

up by IBM’S research campus in Yorktown Heights, is now a focal point of the campaign to turn the tide on Parkinson’s.

Research has establishe­d that Parkinson’s patients suffer changes to their gait and movement.

The Bluesky team believe the results from observing ‘wired’ patients as they go about their daily routines will lead to earlier diagnosis, and better and faster clinical trials for new drugs.

Crucially, it could provide the opportunit­y for prolonged independen­ce delivered by home monitors which will predict when medication is wearing off and when patients might become more susceptibl­e to falls.

The project, which has been testing for 18 months, fuses artificial intelligen­ce and real-time collection of patient data to provide a round-the-clock window on disease symptoms.

Diagnosing and monitoring Parkinson’s in current clinical settings is difficult and relies on a series of often crude tests, such as walking up and down a hospital corridor and being asked to touch your nose with a fingertip to check for changes in a range of physical functions.

These are subjective and notoriousl­y problemati­c to assess as the disease varies between patients and between their doctor’s appointmen­ts.

“One of the issues we have with Parkinson’s is that we cannot monitor the progressio­n accurately which means we cannot test new drugs very effectivel­y,” says Dr Beckie Port, of Parkinson’s UK. “Clinical trials could have failed in the past not because the drugs haven’t worked but because we are unable to test them effectivel­y in Parkinson’s.”

A decade of research into the genetic causes of Parkinson’s has led to a promising pipeline of new drugs, aimed at controllin­g chemical signalling in the brain, and the re-purposing of existing drugs to fight the condition.

Dr Port adds: “We are in a strong position to develop better drugs in the future and we need to get them faster with improved clinical trials.

“Technology could help with early diagnosis and allow digital health to provide monitoring, enabling people to stay at home for as long as possible, and allow carers and family members to know their loved ones are safe.”

Onset of the disease is insidious, with the patient’s family trapped in a web of going ever slower

 ??  ?? PIONEERS Ajay Royyuru, Robert Stackhouse, Stephen Amato, Marco Cavallo and Jeremy Rice MONITORED Research team member Robert Stackhouse demonstrat­es how patients are ‘wired’ up and tracked with m
PIONEERS Ajay Royyuru, Robert Stackhouse, Stephen Amato, Marco Cavallo and Jeremy Rice MONITORED Research team member Robert Stackhouse demonstrat­es how patients are ‘wired’ up and tracked with m
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 ??  ?? VICTIMS Sir Billy Connolly, Neil Diamond and Michael J Fox
VICTIMS Sir Billy Connolly, Neil Diamond and Michael J Fox
 ?? Photograph­s by Roger Allen ?? motion sensors as they go about their daily routine
Photograph­s by Roger Allen motion sensors as they go about their daily routine

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