Stephenson D, Alexander R, Aggarwal V, Badawy R, Bain L, Bhatnagar R, Bloem BR, Boroojerdi B, Burton J, Cedarbaum JM, Cosman J, Dexter DT, Dockendorf M, Dorsey ER, Dowling AV, Evers LJW, Fisher K, Frasier M, Garcia-Gancedo L, Goldsack JC, Hill D, Hitchcock J, Hu MT, Lawton MP, Lee SJ, Lindemann M, Marek K, Mehrotra N, Meinders MJ, Minchik M, Oliva L, Romero K, Roussos G, Rubens R, Sadar S, Scheeren J, Sengoku E, Simuni T, Stebbins G, Taylor KI, Yang B, and Zach N
Innovative tools are urgently needed to accelerate the evaluation and subsequent approval of novel treatments that may slow, halt, or reverse the relentless progression of Parkinson disease (PD). Therapies that intervene early in the disease continuum are a priority for the many candidates in the drug development pipeline. There is a paucity of sensitive and objective, yet clinically interpretable, measures that can capture meaningful aspects of the disease. This poses a major challenge for the development of new therapies and is compounded by the considerable heterogeneity in clinical manifestations across patients and the fluctuating nature of many signs and symptoms of PD. Digital health technologies (DHT), such as smartphone applications, wearable sensors, and digital diaries, have the potential to address many of these gaps by enabling the objective, remote, and frequent measurement of PD signs and symptoms in natural living environments. The current climate of the COVID-19 pandemic creates a heightened sense of urgency for effective implementation of such strategies. In order for these technologies to be adopted in drug development studies, a regulatory-aligned consensus on best practices in implementing appropriate technologies, including the collection, processing, and interpretation of digital sensor data, is required. A growing number of collaborative initiatives are being launched to identify effective ways to advance the use of DHT in PD clinical trials. The Critical Path for Parkinson's Consortium of the Critical Path Institute is highlighted as a case example where stakeholders collectively engaged regulatory agencies on the effective use of DHT in PD clinical trials. Global regulatory agencies, including the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency, are encouraging the efficiencies of data-driven engagements through multistakeholder consortia. To this end, we review how the advancement of DHT can be most effectively achieved by aligning knowledge, expertise, and data sharing in ways that maximize efficiencies., Competing Interests: Critical Path Institute staff (D. Stephenson, V. Aggarawal, R. Bhatnagar, K. Romero, J. Burton, S. Sadar, and M. Minchick) and R. Badawy, L. Bain, J.M. Cedarbaum, D.T. Dexter, M. Frasier, D. Hill Michael, and P. Lawton have no conflict of interests to declare. R. Alexander, N. Zach, and R. Rubens are full-time employees of Takeda. A.V. Dowling is an employee of Takeda Pharmaceuticals and also serves on the Strategic Advisory Board of the DiMe Society. B.R. Bloem currently serves as associate editor for the Journal of Parkinson Disease, serves on the editorial board of Practical Neurology and Digital Biomarkers, has received honoraria from serving on the scientific advisory board for AbbVie, Biogen, UCB, and Walk with Path, has received fees for speaking at conferences from AbbVie, Zambon, Roche, GE Healthcare, and Bial, and has received research support from The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, the Michael J. Fox Foundation, UCB, AbbVie, the Stichting Parkinson-Fonds, the Hersenstichting Nederland, the Parkinson Foundation, Verily Life Sciences, Horizon 2020, Topsector Life Sciences and Health, and the Parkinson Vereniging. B. Boroojerdi and E. Sengoku are employed by UCB. J. Cosman was a full-time employee of Biogen, Inc., and is currently a full-time employee of AbbVie, Inc. M. Dockendorf, S.J. Lee, and N. Mehrotra are employees of Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc. (Kenilworth, NJ, USA), and may own stock/stock options in Merck & Co., Inc. E.R. Dorsey has received honoraria for speaking at American Academy of Neurology courses, the American Neurological Association, and the University of Michigan. E.R. Dorsey received compensation for consulting services from: 23andMe; Abbott; AbbVie; American Well; Biogen; BrainNeuroBio; Clintrex; Curasen Therapeutics; DeciBio; Denali Therapeutics; GlaxoSmithKline; Grand Rounds; Karger; Lundbeck; MC10; MedAvante; Medical-Legal Services; Mednick Associates; the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke; the Olson Research Group; Optio; Origent Data Sciences, Inc.; Otsuka, Prilenia; Putnam Associates; Roche; Sanofi; Shire; Spark; Sunovion Pharma; Teva; Theravance; UCB; and Voyager Therapeutics. E.R. Dorsey also received research support from AbbVie, Acadia Pharmaceuticals, AMC Health, Biosensics, the Burroughs Wellcome Fund, the Davis Phinney Foundation, Duke University, the FDA, GlaxoSmithKline, the Greater Rochester Health Foundation, the Huntington Study Group, the Michael J. Fox Foundation, the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, the National Science Foundation, Nuredis Pharmaceuticals, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, Pfizer, Prana Biotechnology, Raptor Pharmaceuticals, Roche, Safra Foundation, Teva Pharmaceuticals, and the University of California, Irvine; has provided editorial services for Karger Publications; and has ownership interests with Blackfynn (data integration company) and Grand Rounds (second opinion service). L.J.W. Evers has received research support from the Michael J. Fox Foundation, UCB, the Stichting Parkinson Fonds, The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, and Topsector Life Sciences and Health. L. Garcia-Gancedo is a full-time employee of GSK. J.C. Goldsack is a part-time employee of HealthMode, Inc. J. Hitchcock is an employee of Hitchcock Regulatory Consulting, Inc., and has consulted for: Acumen Pharmaceuticals; Axon Advisors LLC; the Critical Path Institute; the Gerson Lehrman Group; H. Lundbeck A/S; the High Lantern Group LLC; Regenera Pharma LTD; UCB Biopharma SPRL; Vaccinex, Inc.; and Washington University. She is retired from Eli Lilly and Company and holds Lilly shares. M.T. Hu serves as a consultant for Biogen and Roche Advisory Boards and for CuraSen Therapeutics, Inc. Prof. Hu has received funding and support from Parkinson's UK, Oxford NIHR BRC, the University of Oxford, NIHR, the Michael J Fox Foundation, H2020 European Union, GE Healthcare, and the PSP Association. M. Lindemann is a consultant for F. Hoffmann-La Roche through Inovigate. M.J. Meinders has received research support from the Michael J. Fox Foundation, UCB, the Stichting Parkinson Fonds, Horizon 2020, and Topsector Life Sciences and Health. L. Oliva and K. Fisher are employees of Biogen. G. Roussos acknowledges funding from the Michael J. Fox Foundation and is a joint patent holder for UK patent GB2433856 (which is not related to healthcare). J. Scheeren was formerly employed by Bayer AG-Pharmaceuticals and as of 2019 is the president and CEO of C-Path. Dr. J. Scheeren is also currently an adjunct professor of regulatory sciences at Peking University in Beijing, China, the chair of the fellows for the Drug Information Association (DIA), a member of the advisory board for the Centre of Regulatory Excellence (CoRE), a special advisor to the scientific advisory council of the Centre for Innovation in Regulatory Science (CIRS), a lecturer at Yale University, and a foreign corresponding member of the French Académie Nationale de Pharmacie. T. Simuni, MD, has served as a consultant for Acadia, AbbVie, Accorda, Adamas, Allergan, Amneal, Aptinyx, Denali, General Electric (GE), Kyowa, Neuroderm, Neurocrine, Sanofi, Sinopia, Sunovion, Roche, Takeda, Voyager, US World Meds, the Parkinson's Foundation, and the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson research. Dr. T. Simuni has served as a speaker and received an honorarium from Acadia and Adamas, is on the scientific advisory board for Neuroderm and Sanofi, and has received research funding from the NINDS, the Parkinson's Foundation, MJFF, Biogen, Roche, Neuroderm, Sanofi, Sun Pharma, AbbVie, IMPAX, and Prevail. G. Stebbins is an employee of Rush University. Dr. G. Stebbins has consulting and advisory board membership with honoraria for: Acadia Pharmaceuticals; Adamas Pharmaceuticals, Inc.; Biogen, Inc.; Ceregene, Inc.; CHDI Management, Inc.; the Cleveland Clinic Foundation; Ingenix Pharmaceutical Services (i3 Research); MedGenesis Therapeutix, Inc.; Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc.; Pfizer, Inc.; Tools-4-Patients; Ultragenyx, Inc.; and the Sunshine Care Foundation. He has received grants from and done research for: the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Defense, the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research, the Dystonia Coalition, CHDI, the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, the International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society, and CBD Solutions, and has received honoraria from: the International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society, the American Academy of Neurology, the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research, the FDA, the National Institutes of Health, and the Alzheimer's Association. K.I. Taylor is a full-time employee and shareholder of F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. B. Yang is a full-time employee at Lundbeck A/S., (Copyright © 2020 by S. Karger AG, Basel.)