Parkinson's Disease.
Review · N Engl J Med · Tanner CM et al. · cited 180×
a Parkinson's disease feed — research, treatments, lived experience, in plain language
Review · N Engl J Med · Tanner CM et al. · cited 180×
Disease Mechanisms Genetics Biomarkers and Diagnosis Non-Motor Symptoms Sleep Motor Symptoms Medications Surgical and Device Therapy Emerging Therapies Exercise Cognition and Mood
This 2024 New England Journal of Medicine review by Dr. Caroline Tanner and Dr. Jill Ostrem (University of California, San Francisco) provides a state-of-the-art overview of Parkinson's disease for clinicians. Its central message for patients and families is that Parkinson's is now understood as a whole-body ("multisystem") disorder that begins years—sometimes more than a decade—before the classic tremor or stiffness appears. Symptoms that can precede the motor diagnosis include loss of smell, constipation, acting out dreams during sleep (called REM sleep behavior disorder, or RBD), and mood changes. Recognizing this "prodromal" phase matters because future disease-modifying treatments are most likely to work before large amounts of brain tissue have been lost.
The article explains that genetic testing is increasingly useful: variants in genes such as LRRK2 and GBA1 can predict how a person's disease is likely to progress and may soon guide which experimental therapies they are offered. New lab tests—especially the alpha-synuclein seed amplification assay (αSyn-SAA), which detects abnormal protein in spinal fluid or other samples—are moving Parkinson's diagnosis toward biology rather than symptoms alone, similar to how Alzheimer's diagnosis now uses brain scans and blood tests. A new biological staging system proposed by the Movement Disorder Society is described; it classifies disease from pre-symptomatic biology all the way through advanced stages.
For daily management, the review confirms that levodopa (often combined with carbidopa) remains the cornerstone drug, and that deep brain stimulation (DBS) and focused ultrasound are effective options for suitable patients with medication-resistant tremor or motor fluctuations. Exercise is singled out as beneficial for motor and non-motor symptoms and possibly neuroprotective. The article also surveys an active pipeline of disease-modifying therapies in clinical trials—including drugs targeting LRRK2, GBA1, alpha-synuclein, and the GLP-1 pathway (similar to diabetes drugs like semaglutide)—offering realistic but cautious hope that treatments to slow or stop disease progression may be available within the next decade.