Literature Review

Prodromal Parkinson’s Disease: Diagnostic Dilemma


 

FROM NEUROLOGY

A Holistic Approach to Shared Decision-Making

To avoid needlessly scaring patients, Dr. Hoy suggested broaching the topic of Parkinson’s disease biomarkers during advance care planning. “In the same conversation that you might talk about establishing surrogate decision-makers or potential do-not-resuscitate/intubate orders, you can talk about the potential of predictive testing, which is becoming more prevalent across domains of clinical practice.”

Understanding each patient’s values, preferences, and priorities requires a holistic approach, he said. “In the context of prodromal Parkinson’s disease, the benefits of enrolling in a new clinical trial or implementing lifestyle changes might vary depending on the person. Do you think this person would be likely to enroll in a clinical trial or implement those lifestyle changes?” Additionally, he recommended considering how a patient might react to a false diagnosis.

Whereas a diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment might not lead to Alzheimer’s disease or dementia, wrote Dr. Rees and colleagues, growing evidence including a review published in Neurology in 2022 supports the accuracy of alpha-synuclein seed amplification assays in detecting both established and prodromal Parkinson’s disease. For people thusly diagnosed, Dr. Rees and colleagues wrote, the psychosocial burden of inevitable progression could create feelings of helplessness, possibly undermining benefits of early knowledge.

Beyond patients’ reactions, said Dr. Hoy, a diagnosis of prodromal Parkinson’s disease could result in social stigma, changes to interpersonal relationships, or discrimination. “Understanding the implications and uncertainties of potential disclosure, relative to what a person would want to know or might be able to do about it, will be the key for deciding when is the right time,” he said.

Supporting Primary Care

As the shared decision-making burden likely will fall to primary care providers, Dr. Hoy added, neurologists should prioritize increasing these providers’ capacity to advise and refer patients appropriately. Although it is too soon to develop clinical guidelines, he said, neurologists could help educate such providers about pPD and the growing availability of promising biomarkers.

“Parkinson’s is thought of as a movement disorder first and foremost,” said Dr. Hoy. However, various non-motor symptoms including sleep problems, depression, anxiety, apathy, constipation, and gastrointestinal issues often appear before movement-related symptoms during the prodromal phase.

As potentially the first line of defense against prodromal Parkinson’s disease, primary care providers also should know the distinction between early and timely diagnosis, added Dr. Hoy. Introduced by Dr. Rees and colleagues in a 2018 review published in F1000Research, timely diagnosis balances patient preferences, the availability and efficacy of DMT, and health systems’ ability to support and manage individuals at every stage of disease.

The current study was funded by a Parkinson’s UK grant (which paid Dr. Rees’s salary). The editorial was supported by a National Institute of Mental Health Brain Research Through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative award, a grant from the National Institute on Aging, and a Wellcome Discovery Award. Dr. Hoy reported no relevant disclosures.

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