The definition of precision medicine in neurodegenerative disorders and the one disease-many diseases tension

Handb Clin Neurol. 2023:192:3-20. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-323-85538-9.00005-5.

Abstract

Precision medicine is a patient-centered approach that aims to translate new knowledge to optimize the type and timing of interventions for the greatest benefit to individual patients. There is considerable interest in applying this approach to treatments designed to slow or halt the progression of neurodegenerative diseases. Indeed, effective disease-modifying treatment (DMT) remains the greatest unmet therapeutic need in this field. In contrast to the enormous progress in oncology, precision medicine in the field of neurodegeneration faces multiple challenges. These are related to major limitations in our understanding of many aspects of the diseases. A critical barrier to advances in this field is the question of whether the common sporadic neurodegenerative diseases (of the elderly) are single uniform disorders (particularly related to their pathogenesis) or whether they represent a collection of related but still very distinct disease states. In this chapter, we briefly touch on lessons from other fields of medicine that might be applied to the development of precision medicine for DMT in neurodegenerative diseases. We discuss why DMT trials may have failed to date, and particularly the importance of appreciating the multifaceted nature of disease heterogeneity and how this has and will impact on these efforts. We conclude with comments on how we can move from this complex disease heterogeneity to the successful application of precision medicine principles in DMT for neurodegenerative diseases.

Keywords: Disease-modifying; Neurodegeneration; Parkinson disease; Precision medicine.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Humans
  • Neurodegenerative Diseases* / therapy
  • Precision Medicine*