A MAN with Parkinson’s disease seems to have recovered after cells grown from his own neural stem cells were implanted in his brain. If further transplants are equally successful, the technique could rival other cell-based therapies already under investigation.
Parkinson’s disease involves damage to cells in the brain that produce the neurotransmitter dopamine. Doctors have long searched for a way to replace the damaged neurons. One option is to use neural cells from aborted fetuses. This alleviates the Parkinson’s symptoms in some, but can cause serious side effects such as a worsening tremor. The patient’s own neural stem cells—primitive cells that can develop into other types of brain cells—seem like an ideal alternative if they could be grown to produce the right sort of cells.
Now Michel Levesque, a neurosurgeon at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, claims his team has done just that. They extracted neural stem cells from the patient’s brain and grew the cells in the lab for several months under conditions that favoured the development of neurons that make dopamine. They then implanted the cells back into the patient’s brain.
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Before the operation, the man’s condition had been deteriorating, despite drug treatment. But now, three years after the treatment, the patient has no symptoms, says Levesque, who is also principal investigator at Celmed BioSciences in Canada. He revealed the work at the annual meeting of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons in Chicago, and is now moving the work into phase 2 trials.
But neurologist Arnold Kriegstein of Columbia University warns that it’s too early to be sure the technique works. For instance, the neurons must be the kind that make dopamine, since other forms could cause seizures, he says.