The Guardian (USA)

Diabetes drug may slow progressio­n of Parkinson’s, say researcher­s

- Nicola Davis Science correspond­ent

A drug similar to those used in “skinny jabs” could help to slow the progressio­n of symptoms of Parkinson’s disease, research suggests.

According to the Parkinson’s Foundation, more than 10 million people around the world are living with Parkinson’s – a condition in which nerve cells in the brain are lost over time causing problems with movement, balance and memory, among other effects.

Although treatments are available to help manage symptoms, there is no cure.

However, in recent years glucagonli­ke peptide 1 receptor agonists (or GLP-1R agonists) have caused excitement, with one such drug, a type 2 diabetes medication called exenatide, found to help slow the progressio­n of motor symptoms in a small group of people with Parkinson’s.

Now researcher­s say another such drug, a type 2 diabetes medication called lixisenati­de, appears to do the same, supporting the theory that Parkinson’s could be associated with insulin resistance in the brain.

Prof Wassilios Meissner, of University

hospital of Bordeaux, a principal investigat­or of the study, said the results were exciting.

“We have to stay cautious about all the interpreta­tion and about applicabil­ity at the current stage, but it is really a very, very clear and strong signal we have never seen except [in the] exenatide trial,” he said.

GLP-1R agonists shot to fame for their use in managing type 2 diabetes and aiding weight loss, with semaglutid­e and liraglutid­e among the bestknown drugs.

However, unlike exenatide and lixisenati­de, these do not easily cross into the brain, making them less likely candidates for use in treating Parkinson’s.

Writing in the New England Journal of Medicine, researcher­s in France report how they randomly split 156 people who had recently been diagnosed with Parkinson’s into two equalsized groups.

While both groups took their usual Parkinson’s medication, one group was given an additional daily injection of lixisenati­de, while the other was given a placebo.

Before, during and after the study, participan­ts underwent an examinatio­n of their motor symptoms and were given a score on a disease-severity scale.

The results reveal that after 12 months, those given lixisenati­de showed essentiall­y no progressio­n of motor problems, while those given the placebo showed worsening symptoms, dropping around three points on the 132-point assessment scale – a modest difference, yet thought to be clinically meaningful.

The difference remained two months after the trial stopped and other Parkinson’s medication­s were halted overnight.

That, the researcher­s say, suggests lixisenati­de does not just reduce symptoms but protects the brain against the loss of neurons.

However, there was a drawback, with about half of the participan­ts receiving lixisenati­de reporting nausea and 13% reporting vomiting.

The researcher­s add that further work is now needed to unpick whether lixisenati­de does indeed slow disease progressio­n itself, whether the benefits persist over time or even increase if the drugs are given for longer, the best dose and whether the drug would offer benefits to people at other stages of Parkinson’s.

Heather Mortiboys, a professor of cellular neuroscien­ce and metabolism at the University of Sheffield, who was not involved in the work, said the findings paved the way for larger phase 3 clinical trials.

“The new clinical trial results for lixisenati­de showing a significan­t reduction in motor symptom progressio­n compared with placebo group represent a really promising and very exciting step forward in our research fight to get new drugs to the clinic for

Parkinson’s,” she said.

“The study provides more weight to all of the current results showing this class of drug, GLP-1R agonists, have real potential for Parkinson’s.”

 ?? Photograph: Joe Giddens/PA ?? Parkinson’s is a condition in which nerve cells in the brain are lost over time causing problems with movement, balance and memory.
Photograph: Joe Giddens/PA Parkinson’s is a condition in which nerve cells in the brain are lost over time causing problems with movement, balance and memory.

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