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04-16-2012, 05:33 AM | #21 | ||
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Quote:
sO WHAT IS THE ANSWER? |
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04-16-2012, 07:17 AM | #22 | |||
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Senior Member
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Regardless of the good I see in MJFF, it's hard not to be cynical about the larger picture. There's only so much Fox can do to operate within an entire system that begs for transformation .....
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Carey “Cautious, careful people, always casting about to preserve their reputation and social standing, never can bring about a reform. Those who are really in earnest must be willing to be anything or nothing in the world’s estimation, and publicly and privately, in season and out, avow their sympathy with despised and persecuted ideas and their advocates, and bear the consequences.” — Susan B. Anthony |
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04-16-2012, 08:28 AM | #23 | ||
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Senior Member
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Indigo you are so right about the good guys having to work within the bad systems we have. It is those things that need to be changed. In my lifetime I have seen medicine change from being about looking after sick people, to being about big bucks. Here in the UK this is being brought home to us heavily this year with the sellout/sell-off of our NHS, something that nearly everyone is opposed to. I wonder when I see this how some of the huge studies that are underway here, observational studies on massive amounts of people running for many years - how will those be possible with a fragmented largely privatised system. I despair of any common sense ruling, because money is what drives everything, and mega-money at that. Like many I don't want to see huge sums going into 'scientific' research that tells us the same thing that common sense does. I also do not want to see money going into every random therapeutic chemical or process that can be exploited as a possibility, some of the studies are so random that it is doubtful whether there is a justification for them at all. Targeted, sensible research with good science behind it, like MJFF does, and no promises and press releases about imminent 'cures' available to patients within 5 years. When there is one we will be the first to know. But the new patients are the ones who currently suffer from hope, from family, friends, colleagues and information systems who tell them that a cure is nearly there. Quality of life has got to be a priority for now. Wellness centres, and support when we lose functionality are desperately needed, and are not there for the majority. In addition to this we are now being told (over here at least) that the old and the disabled are a huge burden and the cause of our economic woes. Yet we are all the time supporting, through our unwellness, an industry that is fairly unscrupulous, and on which we depend for both product and innovation.
Roll on change, I say, and some balance in the way things are run, and then maybe the pipelines for many things will unblock, and not just for us. |
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04-18-2012, 01:03 PM | #24 | ||
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Senior Member
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Is this a possibility?
For some types of PD and for some types of PwP, we already have treatments which radically slow down the progression of the disease? BUT, we don't know we've got them. I'm thinking of the work by Jannetta on nerve compression, GDNF, exercise, supplements etc.. I'm thinking of the different rates of progression from person to person, which suggests that there is more than one disease process at work and that there are some theraputic regimes which are better than others. If this is the case: - track everyone, especially the long term survivers. What have they done differently? - design clinical trials focussed on the individual: a drug which slowed progression by 50% for half of PwP but increased it by 50% for the other half would be a great drug ... provided you could focus it on the right group. John
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Born 1955. Diagnosed PD 2005. Meds 2010-Nov 2016: Stalevo(75 mg) x 4, ropinirole xl 16 mg, rasagiline 1 mg Current meds: Stalevo(75 mg) x 5, ropinirole xl 8 mg, rasagiline 1 mg |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Conductor71 (04-19-2012) |
04-18-2012, 02:16 PM | #25 | |||
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Senior Member
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johnt -
you wrote: "I'm thinking of the different rates of progression from person to person, which suggests that there is more than one disease process at work and that there are some theraputic regimes which are better than others." the PPMI study being funded by Fox hopes to shed light on what you are talking about - it's difficult to design treatments for something we don't fully understand. Tracking biological changes in the body over several years time will hopefully yield markers that can then be targeted for therapy. It's a long process, but at least it is finally underway.
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Carey “Cautious, careful people, always casting about to preserve their reputation and social standing, never can bring about a reform. Those who are really in earnest must be willing to be anything or nothing in the world’s estimation, and publicly and privately, in season and out, avow their sympathy with despised and persecuted ideas and their advocates, and bear the consequences.” — Susan B. Anthony |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | pegleg (04-22-2012) |
04-18-2012, 04:18 PM | #26 | ||
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In Remembrance
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This is a future vision for those that come after us. i think those, like michael,and many of us. should also be tracked to see the different types. there have to be similarities that can be discovered from our present conditon.
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paula "Time is not neutral for those who have pd or for those who will get it." Last edited by paula_w; 04-18-2012 at 04:40 PM. |
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04-18-2012, 06:35 PM | #27 | |||
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Senior Member
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The good news on biomarkers is that data collection has already begun. It's a five year study, the information from which is being made available for research as it is gathered, not all at the end. Hopefully, even those who are more advanced now will see some benefit.
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Carey “Cautious, careful people, always casting about to preserve their reputation and social standing, never can bring about a reform. Those who are really in earnest must be willing to be anything or nothing in the world’s estimation, and publicly and privately, in season and out, avow their sympathy with despised and persecuted ideas and their advocates, and bear the consequences.” — Susan B. Anthony |
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04-18-2012, 10:35 PM | #28 | ||
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Senior Member
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As always, it goes back to the fact that they are not looking at patients enough. The data is there, we are the data. The differences matter. They just haven't got to grips with that yet.
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Conductor71 (04-19-2012), olsen (04-21-2012) |
04-23-2012, 03:56 PM | #29 | ||
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I appreciate the frustration as well as the indignation about the slowness of progress. I know firsthand how hard it is to try to view the big picture and have a sense for things moving. Science is complex and biology is hard. I have a couple of parts of this thread where I want to weigh-in:
We have novel therapies (beyond the dopamine system) in trials today! I repeat. We have novel therapies beyond dopamine right now in trials. This is reason for excitement. For disease modification there will be 3 trials in trophic factors (promising proteins being delivered via various strategies to various regions of the brain) ongoing or starting this summer. We have our first trial in alpha synuclein finally in trials. This is good news and more novel targets in the pre-clinical pipeline and are getting close based on our increasing knowledge of Parkinson’s (such as LRRK2 strategies). We also have a number of very promising trials with novel approaches to treat dyskinesias. The most recent success announced with the Addex trial which (if they can find an investment partner) should be moving to phase III by the end of the year. All science is high risk. Rather than thinking of "good and bad" science, I find it more useful to think of "interesting" science vs "relevant" science. MJFF focuses aggressively on funding the high-risk science that is relevant for drug development. Many of the exciting strategies now in the clinic (for disease modification and/or dyskinesias) are programs we have been funding since our earliest days when we put smaller dollars out on higher-risk/earlier stage ideas. We continue to make those critical bets and at the same time, now some of those first bets have been stewarded all the way to the clinical testing stage (which has been the motivation behind our growing call for trial participants). More exciting studies mean more volunteers needed—plain, but not so simple. Patients aren't learning about trials from their physicians. Fox trial finder is a tool that actually relies on self-reported information (patient data) to find smart suggestions on suitable trials. We see it not only as a tool to support recruitment but as a first step into the field to prepare for the bigger undertaking of collecting significant patient-reported data (the idea mentioned in the thread). Our fantasy (and 23andMe's--we are exploring this together) is to pair genetic data with additional clinical, imaging, biological and self-reported data. This goes far beyond what has been done to date but builds on works done in a couple of current efforts. All these platforms, PPMI, 23andMe, and Fox Trials Finder, in addition to their respective primary goals, are teaching us and confirming what to collect, refining collection standards, establishing data sharing models, and testing patient willingness to engage. One of the things that keeps me up at night is the observation that despite an intention to help, ultimately few patients take action. Inertia and apathy (as part of the disease) present real challenges. Given the extraordinary investments here, no one can afford to set up a system with ambitious collection, sharing and mining expectations only to get a small numbers of participants. Consider these numbers: 23andMe (spit in a test tube for genetic SNP's – a relatively low friction call to action) has found ~6000 of the desired 10,000 study participants with 2 years of investment in outreach. Note the test is free and not location sensitive. Fox Trial finder isn't a study but does request the expression of "interest" in the form of registration to capture basic patient data for trial matching. Again, minimal impediments to action and conveniently web-based. We have ~4000 registrants since June 2011 with broad media and community outreach. We hope to get to 10,000 registrants this year but really need to get multiples of that to have the desired impact of speeding recruitment. Breast cancer got over 300,000 such volunteers. PPMI is an example that represents the other extreme. Data collected here is extensive and selective and participants need to be sourced from specific locations. Plus the subjects needed (newly diagnosed but not yet on medications) are particularly hard to find. Elaborate systems have been put in place for training, sample storage and data sharing for this study. The investment in recruiting the needed 600 subjects has been significant and one year into it we are just at the half-way mark for enrollment. I share these details to provide some context around the challenges in “getting all the pwp” to actually engage in these activities. Plus, PPMI is designed to optimize the learnings from this data as soon as possible. Researchers around the world can access the data in real time and start making discoveries. Already, the data has been downloaded over 15K times by researchers from all over the world. I mention these platforms for a couple of reasons…they represent new ways in which folks from outside the traditional research enterprise are problem-solving around getting information from patients. These new approaches in themselves are high-risk translational investments but are newly feasible as today there are new ways to leverage technology advancements to better support science. These are meaningful new tools at our disposal that can reshape the promise of science and shift the equations of possibilities. These changes are complex and, at least I’d like to believe, come in the context of pretty significant change that has been underway in the last decade. To compliment this, we could use some continued help in reaching more patients with a message to encourage engagement—there are some aspects of this where only the patient can make the difference…we have a long way to go on all fronts but if everyone does their best to do their part (whatever that may be), I believe we can get better treatments delivered. Debi PS..if one only looks at the cost of administering a test (such as a collecting DNA samples) it doesn’t provide a full view of what is needed to capitalize on the information. While sobering, it is important to view putting all the pieces in place to get useful outcomes. Who will establish the protocols, who will build the infrastructure for collection, who will orchestrate sharing, who will manage questions, who will protect data, who will build networks to find patients, who will pay to analyze data? This list goes on and on taking me back to my first statement science is complex. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | indigogo (04-23-2012), jeanb (04-23-2012), lindylanka (04-24-2012), Nan Cyclist (04-23-2012), paula_w (04-23-2012), pegleg (04-23-2012), RLSmi (04-23-2012) |
04-24-2012, 11:08 AM | #30 | ||
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Member
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From my perspective I'm constantly looking for a two pronged approach: now and then. "Now" refers to what can we PwPs do now to slow, halt or reverse the progression of our disease. Programs like Pedaling For Parkinson's, dance, big and loud, all help people in various stages. "Then" refers to the research arm as Debi articulates so well. How can we as PwPs support those efforts? As PPMI gets closer to identifying biomarkers, research labs are more interested in investing in therapies that can actually have measurable outcomes in the short term rather than waiting 20 years to see how patients respond. Hence we see increased interest from big pharm as they see measurable outcomes on the short term horizon.
Debi points to the greatest difficulty, or at least one huge hurdle: getting people in our community to participate. I'm in two long term studies and my husband is in PPMI. How hard can it be to find 600 people willing to be in PPMI? Harder than we expected. Our biggest hurdle in Pedaling For Parkinson's is getting people out the door to YMCAs to get on the bikes or to get on the bikes at home. They just have to have a regular road bike on a trainer at home or hop on one at the Y, but getting people to do it is tough. I really don't know why. It's hard, but it must be harder to sit in one spot and watch life go by. There are lifelines. Why don't people grab them? What am I missing? |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Debi Brooks (04-25-2012), paula_w (04-24-2012) |
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