Advanced PET and MR scans show that there are actually two different forms of Parkinson's disease
PET and MR imaging reveal two different forms of Parkinson's disease
September 25, 2020
by
John R. Fischer, Senior Reporter
Advanced PET and MR imaging techniques employed in a Danish study have uncovered a new finding about Parkinson’s disease — that there are in fact two types of it.
One form starts in the brain before spreading to the intestines and other organs such as the heart, while the other begins in the intestines and then spreads to the brain. The discovery explains why patients have widely different symptoms, and opens up discussions for delivering more personalized treatments to patients depending on their disease pattern.
"We hypothesize that the type that (probably) starts in the intestinal nervous system can be triggered by the microbiome (e.g., bacteria producing pro-aggregation factors like the protein curli), and also by inflammatory states (inflammatory bowel disorders like Crohn's disease increase the risk of PD) — and also by infections (gastrointestinal infections increase the risk of PD). In addition, the person probably needs to be vulnerable, such as if they have risk genes," study author professor Per Borghammer from the department of clinical medicine at Aarhus University and Aarhus University Hospital, told HCB News. "For the cause of the brain-first PD type, we don't know for sure. It could be risk genes, old age."
Up to eight million patients have been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease worldwide, and the figure is expected to increase to 15 million in 2050 due to the ageing population, as the risk of developing the condition increases dramatically the older the population becomes.
The two types are referred to as “body-first” and “brain-first”. Advanced PET and MR imaging approaches found those whose disease started in the brain incurred damage to the dopamine system before they did in the intestines and heart, while those with the other type experienced the opposite. Patients who had not yet been diagnosed but had a high risk of developing Parkinson’s disease were also included in the study. This includes people with REM sleep behavior syndrome, which is associated with an increased risk for developing the disease.
The discovery will enable researchers to study risk factors and genetic factors that distinguish both types. For example, those with body-first Parkinson’s disease may benefit from greater research efforts on the composition of microbiota, bacteria in the intestines, due to patients with Parkinson’s disease having a different microbiome in the intestines than healthy people. He and his colleagues plan to research possible approaches that affect the microbiome, including the transplantation of faeces.
The brain-first form of the disease is harder to address, however, due to the variant of the disease being relatively symptom-free until the movement disorder symptoms appear and the patient is formally diagnosed, making it more difficult to find patients early enough to slow the disease. By then the patient has already lost more than half of the dopamine system, says Borghammer.
"Different genes or other factors (microbiome, infection, inflammation) may cause one type or the other," he said. "If we can identify such factors, we can perhaps develop new treatments to alter the cause of the disease and even prevent it altogether. But a lot of research still has to be done before we get there."
Previous research indicated that there could be more than one type of Parkinson's disease. What makes the study the most comprehensive ever is that follow-up exams with participants are scheduled after three and six years so that all procedures and scans can be repeated. This enables researchers to better understand the two different types of Parkinson’s disease.
Borghammer and his colleagues are expanding their cohort of patients to include more than 100. Each will be scanned with multiple scanning techniques so that researchers can assess the differences between them and potentially identify their risk factors.
All will be followed up for 10 years and scanned every three years to track their disease progression. Studies of blood, urine, and stools, and biopsies to search for causative factors will also be conducted, and animal models that reflect both types of Parkinson's disease will be created for further study.
The findings were published in Brain.