Back to Search Start Over

Robust graft survival and normalized dopaminergic innervation do not obligate recovery in a Parkinson disease patient

Authors :
Jeffrey H, Kordower
Christopher G, Goetz
Yaping, Chu
Glenda M, Halliday
Daniel A, Nicholson
Timothy F, Musial
David J, Marmion
A Jon, Stoessl
Vesna, Sossi
Thomas B, Freeman
C Warren, Olanow
Source :
Annals of neurology. 81(1)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The main goal of dopamine cell replacement therapy in Parkinson disease (PD) is to provide clinical benefit mediated by graft survival with nigrostriatal reinnervation. We report a dichotomy between graft structure and clinical function in a patient dying 16 years following fetal nigral grafting.A 55-year-old levodopa-responsive woman with PD received bilateral putaminal fetal mesencephalic grafts as part of an NIH-sponsored double-blind sham-controlled trial. The patient never experienced clinical benefit, and her course was complicated by the development of graft-related dyskinesias. Fluorodopa positron emission tomography demonstrated significant increases postgrafting bilaterally. She experienced worsening of parkinsonism with severe dyskinesias, and underwent subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation 8 years after grafting. She died 16 years after transplantation.Postmortem analyses confirmed the diagnosis of PD and demonstrated300,000 tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-positive grafted cells per side with normalized striatal TH-immunoreactive fiber innervation and bidirectional synaptic connectivity. Twenty-seven percent and 17% of grafted neurons were serine 129-phosphorylated α-synuclein positive in the left and right putamen, respectively.These findings represent the largest number of surviving dopamine neurons and the densest and most widespread graft-mediated striatal dopamine reinnervation following a transplant procedure reported to date. Despite this, clinical recovery was not observed. Furthermore, the grafts were associated with a form of dyskinesias that resembled diphasic dyskinesia and persisted in the off-medication state. We hypothesize that the grafted cells produced a low level of dopamine sufficient to cause a levodopa-independent continuous form of diphasic dyskinesias, but insufficient to provide an antiparkinsonian benefit. ANN NEUROL 2017;81:46-57.

Details

ISSN :
15318249
Volume :
81
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of neurology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........242a966999c2ddaa77b0863e39144061