Parkinson´s Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Common Noradrenergic Mechanisms in Parkinson´s Disease and L-DOPA Induced Dyskinesia and Healthy Age Matched Controls; [11C]Yohimbine and [11C]MeNER PET
The aims of this proposal include tests of hypotheses of the pathogenetic mechanisms of
noradrenergic neurotransmission in Parkinson's disease in vivo, using positron emission
tomography of patients with early and advanced Parkinson's disease with or without 3,4
L-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA) - induced dyskinesia or co-morbid depression, and
evaluation of whether these mechanisms can be influenced therapeutically.
Hypotheses:
1. The investigators argue that release in human cortical and subcortical brain regions of
norepinephrine (NE) derived from metabolism of exogenousL-DOPA is greater in
Parkinson's disease patients with L-DOPA- induced dyskinesia than in patients without
this complication. This hypothesis will be tested by measuring antagonist
[11C]yohimbine binding to alpha-2 adrenoceptors before and after L-DOPA challenge.
2. If so, it is argued that the greater rise of norepinephrine, measured as [11C]yohimbine
displacement after L-DOPA challenge, is the result of down-regulation or loss of
norepinephrine transporters. This hypothesis will be tested by measuring the binding of
[11C]MeNER, a tracer of norepinephrine transporters.
3. If so, the investigators argue that the greater decline of [11C]MeNER binding is
significantly correlated to the symptoms of Parkinson's disease, as proof that patients
with more severe loss of noradrenergic terminals exhibit more severe motor deficits.
Introduction: The major source of NE in the central nervous system (CNS) is the locus
coeruleus (LC), which sends projections to virtually all parts of the CNS, integrating
cognitive and autonomic functions with the state of arousal (Sara SJ 2009).
With the onset of pathogenesis of PD in the lower brainstem, early symptoms of PD that
include sleep disorder, cognitive deficits, and autonomic dysfunction, may appear prior to
the motor symptoms of PD, and these symptoms have been linked to the degeneration of the LC
and subsequent loss of noradrenergic innervations in the peripheral and central nervous
systems (Rascol et al., 2009, Hawkes et al., 2010, Braak et al., 2003).
The loss of neurons in the LC exceeds that of the substantia nigra in some studies (Zarow et
al. 2003), in which it is also argued that the loss may be related to the symptoms of
endogenous depression in 40% of patients with PD. In these patients, the severity of motor
symptoms also may be aggravated by loss of NE as release of dopamine (DA) and firing of
dopaminergic neurons normally are both facilitated by activation of noradrenergic neurons.
Lesion of the LC and the subsequent loss of this facilitation reduces nigrostriatal DA
release. Similarly, lesions to both dopaminergic and noradrenergic neurons induce more
severe motor deficits, compared to lesions of dopaminergic neurons alone (Mavridis M et al.,
1999). This relation suggests direct and indirect roles for NE in the emergence and severity
of both motor and non-motor symptoms in PD, including depression.
The effects of NE are mediated by stimulation of the three receptor subtypes alpha-1,
alpha-2, and ß. In the proposed studies, the investigators focus on alpha-2 and ß-receptors.
Of the alpha-2 receptors, the alpha2C subtype is densely expressed in structures of the
basal ganglia and therefore may mediate the direct effects of alpha-2 receptors on motor
behavior.
However, in contrast to the possible beneficial effects of NE receptor activation in some
brain regions, non-physiological increases of NE, after L- DOPA administration, may elicit
dyskinesia (Buck et al., 2010) while fluctuations of NE concentration in other regions may
contribute to generation of symptoms of depression (Zarow et al. 2003). Thus, several lines
of evidence suggest that loss of NE may have direct and indirect roles in the appearance and
severity of both motor and non-motor symptoms of PD and in LIDs.
Background:
Noradrenergic treatment of PD: The initial relief from symptoms of PD offered by DA agonist
therapy is complicated by the manifestation of motor fluctuations, dyskinesia and
psychiatric side effects following chronic treatment (Ahlskog et al., 2001, Fox et al.,
2008).
The efficacy of conventional DA agonist therapy to reduce motor symptoms in PD is related to
its ability to restore lost dopaminergic innervations. However, recent evidence suggests
that activation of non- dopaminergic transmitter systems, including the noradrenergic system
may play an important role in mediating the anti-parkinsonian effects of L-DOPA. L-DOPA and
DA are sequential precursors of NE, and excitation of noradrenergic receptors following
L-DOPA administration may contribute to the anti-parkinsonian effects of L-DOPA ( Schapira
et al., 2008). Non-physiologically high release of NE derived from exogenous L-DOPA derived
NE may contribute to both co-morbid depression and LID.
It further suggests that therapies that maintain L-DOPA- induced activation of NE receptors
at physiological levels would reduce the severity of LID in patients. However, the
underlying mechanisms of possible anti-parkinsonian and dyskinetogenic roles of NE remain
unresolved. In this project, the investigators propose to identify the mechanisms through
which NE conveys both beneficial and adverse effects of L-DOPA in a concerted attempt to
help improve current treatment of PD by suggesting therapies that target the
non-physiological L- DOPA-induced activation of the NE receptors as a potential contributor
to LID.
The investigators developed and validated a novel PET tracer to be used in this project.
Carbon-11 labelled yohimbine is an alpha-2 adrenoceptor antagonist and have been validated
in studies with PET in pigs (Jakobsen et al., 2006, Landau et al. 2012) and approved for
human use. To show that binding of [11C]yohimbine is sensitive to endogenously released NE,
the investigators determined the binding before and after Vagus Nerve Stimulation in
minipigs in vivo.
This group of researchers also developed the selective NET ligand, [11C]MeNER, for clinical
PET studies in Denmark. Patients with PD and age-matched healthy controls will undergo
PET-scans with the above-mentioned tracers to map pathological changes in noradrenergic
transporters and receptors in-vivo.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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