The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research New York
07.08.2025 - 18:06:18Patient, Research and Industry Leaders Propose Biological Definition and First Biological Staging for Parkinson's Disease
"This new research framework promises to transform clinical trial design as we know it," said Diane Stephenson, PhD, executive director, Critical Path for Parkinson's Consortium, Critical Path Institute, and a coauthor on The Lancet Neurology paper. "This is how the field will meaningfully and tangibly achieve smarter and faster drug trials and treatments that can slow or halt disease progression, and perhaps one day, prevent the disease process from occurring altogether."
Because the framework encompasses clinical syndromes for which dysfunctional asyn is the defining biological hallmark, it applies to — and stands to improve treatment for — both PD and dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB). The NSD-ISS unifies PD and DLB along the same continuum of progression based on a standardized biological diagnosis.
Framework Developed through Open Multistakeholder Collaboration
There is widespread recognition that to achieve a paradigm shift in how PD is defined and staged, multiple diverse stakeholders need to come together and engage in open and transparent dialogue. As part of the effort, the framework's international working group hosted a multistakeholder discussion to collect input on the concepts for NSD-ISS from people and families living with PD, neuroscience and clinical leaders, industry experts, federal research funders (i.e., the National Institutes of Health), disease-focused nonprofit organizations and regulatory authorities (i.e., the Food and Drug Administration). A draft manuscript also was posted online for public comment. The process — which engaged more than 550 individuals and organizations from six continents — resulted in a framework informed by collective community input.
"Inviting scientific discourse from a multitude of perspectives is a key principle and a shared value of every organization and individual in the working group effort," said Sohini Chowdhury, The Michael J. Fox Foundation's chief program officer and a coauthor on the paper. "This new research framework is the product of a diverse community of contributors, whose inputs have helped to align and harmonize this first meaningful step toward a shared tool for researchers and the biopharma industry."
NSD-ISS Will Become a Research Accelerator for the Field
The first iteration of the NSD-ISS framework is expected to play a transformative role in guiding development of therapies that affect disease progression by:
"Our shared hope is that this new framework will foster innovation in clinical development, making trials more efficient and streamlining regulatory review. In short, the NSD-ISS is a research accelerator. And it is expected to evolve with accumulating scientific knowledge," said Tanya Simuni, MD, lead author on the paper, professor of neurology and director of the Parkinson's Disease Movement Disorders Center at Northwestern University. "The success that the Alzheimer's field has had with its biological framework provides the inspiration and motivation to achieve similar accelerated timelines in Parkinson's. Ten years from now, we hope we will look back and say this framework was the key that finally opened the door to next-generation treatments in Parkinson's."
As Simuni and her coauthors note in The Lancet Neurology paper, the framework offers an actionable proposal to researchers and industry creating a new path for efficient clinical trials, but at present, it is not intended for use in routine clinical care.
The paper includes acknowledgement that data supporting concepts of the NSD-ISS framework have emerged largely from the Foundation's landmark PPMI study. Major funding for PPMI comes from Aligning Science Across Parkinson's (ASAP) (www.parkinsonsroadmap.org), a coordinated research initiative focused on accelerating the pace of discovery and informing the path to a cure for PD. ASAP support is enabling a seismic expansion of PPMI to increase recruitment efforts and remote testing for those at-risk for PD as well as expanding assay development efforts to enable breakthroughs such as the alpha-synuclein seed amplification assay. PPMI is additionally funded by a consortium of more than 40 biotech and pharmaceutical firms providing financial and in-kind support, and by tens of thousands of individual donors to The Michael J. Fox Foundation. Heralded as "the study that's changing everything" about how Parkinson's is diagnosed, managed and treated, PPMI and its data are made possible by the more than 2,000 in-clinic and 40,000 online research volunteers with and without Parkinson's disease.
"It's still early, but this framework will have an immediate impact in terms of how we're designing clinical protocols and optimizing research that can lead to better treatments that patients are waiting for," said Peter DiBiaso, MHSA, a coauthor on the paper, a drug development professional, and member of MJFF's Patient Council who was diagnosed with PD at 49. "We know there's a lot of work to be done, but this is the most important first step the field can take together to rapidly advance breakthroughs for patients and families."
About The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research (MJFF)
As the world's largest nonprofit funder of Parkinson's research, The Michael J. Fox Foundation is dedicated to accelerating a cure for Parkinson's disease and improved therapies for those living with the condition today. The Foundation pursues its goals through an aggressively funded, highly targeted research program coupled with active global engagement of scientists, Parkinson's patients, business leaders, clinical trial participants, donors and volunteers. In addition to funding $1.75 billion in research to date, the Foundation has fundamentally altered the trajectory of progress toward a cure.?Operating at the hub of worldwide Parkinson's research, the Foundation forges groundbreaking collaborations with industry leaders, academic scientists and government research funders; creates a robust open-access data set and biosample library to speed scientific breakthroughs and treatment with its landmark clinical study, PPMI; increases the flow of participants into Parkinson's disease clinical trials with its online tool, Fox Trial Finder; promotes Parkinson's awareness through high-profile advocacy, events and outreach; and coordinates the grassroots involvement of thousands of Team Fox members around the world.?For more information, visit us at?www.michaeljfox.org,?Facebook or?Twitter.
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