News, Analysis, Trends, Management Innovations for
Clinical Laboratories and Pathology Groups

Hosted by Robert Michel

News, Analysis, Trends, Management Innovations for
Clinical Laboratories and Pathology Groups

Hosted by Robert Michel
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Pharmaceutical and biotech researchers convened last week to discuss their latest work on targeting neurodegenerative diseases

With all the news this year alone on progress being made with diagnostic testing for Alzheimer’s disease, clinical laboratory professionals will be interested to know that drug discovery efforts to combat neurogenerative diseases are also at a heightened pitch.

Last week at the one-day Neuroimmunology in Drug Discovery forum in Boston, scientists learned about the latest advances in therapeutic research to better treat Alzheimer’s disease, multiple sclerosis, and Parkinson’s disease. As the treatments advance, demand for them will increase, which goes hand-in-hand with medical lab testing to detect signs of these illnesses.

The concern is urgent. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) noted that 10% of people age 65 and older have Alzheimer’s disease, and that number could double by 2050. The FDA recently cleared the first in vitro diagnostics device that tests blood to diagnose Alzheimer’s, and other IVD manufacturers and clinical labs are working on other Alzheimer’s tests, Dark Daily reported.

“It’s looking quite promising for NLRP3 inhibitors,” said Cheryl Leyns, PhD, associate principal scientist in discovery neuroscience at Merck Research Laboratories, in discussing how mutations of the NLRP3 protein can lead to neurodegenerative diseases. (Photo copyright: ELRIG.)

Inflammation Foreshadows Neurodegenerative Diseases

Much of the discussion at the Neuroimmunology in Drug Discovery forum centered on the idea that neuroinflammation—in other words, inflammation of the brain or spinal cord—starts well before neurodegenerative diseases arise. Neuroinflammation can accelerate Parkinson’s disease and other neurodegenerative disorders, said Cheryl Leyns, PhD, associate principal scientist, neuroimmunology, at Merck Research Laboratories in Boston, who spoke at the event.

From that perspective, drug discovery researchers are on the prowl for these early signs of future problems.

Leyns discussed NLRP3, a protein that aids the body’s inflammation process. A mutation of NLRP3 can lead to inflammatory problems, making the protein a prime target for researchers. “We have been interested, in the biopharma space, in the potential of NLRP3 inhibitors,” she noted. 

Older Immune Systems Are Susceptible

While many in the public correctly associate Alzheimer’s with a person being outwardly older, a lesser-known aspect is that the body’s immune system also ages, becoming more susceptible over time to chronic inflammation.

“We haven’t been talking about aging enough—specifically the aging of the immune system,” said Rebecca Wailings, a senior postdoctoral fellow at the Stark Neurosciences Research Institute at Indiana University.

Wailings’ assertion was not rhetorical. She pointed to numbers which showed scholarly research that involved the terms “inflammation,” “neurodegeneration,” and “aging” was only about 17% of the total amount of journal articles that addressed the first two terms, but which did not include “aging.”

As the pharmaceutical, biotech, and medical fields move aggressively forward to defend people against neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s, clinical laboratory scientists should take comfort that diagnostic testing trends are solidly in the mix.

Therapeutic advances, along with increased options for testing, show promising signs that patients and their caregivers will have more tools to use in the battle against these illnesses.

—Scott Wallask

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