Higher-than-expected rate of gene mutations seen in Parkinson's patients
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[July 30, 2024]
By Nancy Lapid
(Reuters) - A higher-than-expected prevalence of gene mutations in
Parkinson’s disease patients suggests genetic testing should be offered
to them more broadly, researchers said on Monday in the medical journal
Brain.
Genetic profiling performed in more than 8,000 patients of varying races
and ethnicities, all with Parkinson's disease, showed 13% had a genetic
form of the progressive brain disorder, the researchers found.
That rate was 18% in patients with known risk factors, such as an
earlier age at onset, Parkinson’s disease in a first-degree relative, or
certain ancestry such as Ashkenazi Jewish, Spanish Basque or North
African Berber.
Among patients with no known risk factors, more than 9% had a
predisposing genetic mutation.
With new gene-specific drugs for the disease entering the research
pipeline, the implications of the findings are significant, the
researchers said.
Previous studies had suggested that about 5% to 10% of Parkinson’s
disease cases were linked with genetic variants – and most of those
studies had been limited to patients with known risk factors.
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Presently, only a small fraction of
people with Parkinson’s disease receive genetic testing, largely
because neurologists are uncomfortable with their knowledge of
Parkinson’s disease genetics, access to genetic counselors is
limited, and the identification of a genetic basis has been unlikely
to impact a patient’s treatment, said James Beck, senior vice
president and chief scientific officer of the Parkinson’s
Foundation, the study’s sponsor.
But with recent advances, doctors “are now on the
cusp of figuring out how to treat patients based on genetics,” Beck
said.
With trials of gene-specific treatments underway, and genetic
results potentially impacting disease prognosis and shedding light
on familial risks, clinical genetic testing should be offered to
everyone with Parkinson’s disease, the research team concluded.
In the meantime, Beck said, anyone with Parkinson’s disease can
enroll in the PDGENE study and receive free genetic testing, here:
https://www.parkinson.org/advancing-research/our-research/pdgeneration.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; editing by Stephen Coates)
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