New brain imaging tests to track Huntington’s
13 December 2010
A range of new clinical, functional, and neuroimaging tests developed by researchers in the Department of Neurodegenerative Disease make it possible to track the progression of Huntington’s disease long before noticeable symptoms appear.

The new tests provide useful biomarkers that could be used
in future trials to detect the effectiveness of potential
disease-modifying treatments within a short time period. Published
online in The Lancet Neurology,
the findings are the first to show quantifiable changes across a broad
range of neuroimaging and clinical measures in presymptomatic
individuals over just one year.
Trials of potential disease-modifying treatments for
Huntington’s disease are not far off, but sensitive and reliable
biomarkers of disease progression need to be established to test
potential treatments early in the disease course, when they are most
likely to be effective at delaying or preventing disease onset. Current
clinical rating scales lack sensitivity and require long observation
periods to show definitive change.
The TRACK-HD longitudinal
observational study was designed to detect very early biomarkers of
change by comparing a range of new assessment techniques including
advanced brain imaging (3T MRI) and cognitive and quantitative motor
tests, with the aim of identifying the best assessments to be used in
clinical trials of potential treatments. 366 individuals from Canada,
France, the Netherlands, and the UK were enrolled—120 presymptomatic
carriers of the expanded Huntington’s disease gene (preHD), 123 patients
with early HD, and 123 non-expanded Huntington’s disease gene carrier
controls.
In 2009, Sarah Tabrizi from UCL’s Institute of Neurology (Department of Neurodegenerative Disease) ,
and colleagues identified a number of sensitive biomarkers in
presymptomatic Huntington’s disease gene carriers from the baseline
TRACK-HD analysis, including significant changes in whole-brain volume,
regional grey and white matter differences, and impairment in a range of
motor and oculomotor tasks, and cognitive and neuropsychiatric
dysfunction.
In this study, they report the 12-month follow-up of
patients from the TRACK-HD study with the goal of establishing which of
the biomarkers previously identified are most sensitive to disease
changes over time.
They conclude: “In our follow-up of the
TRACK-HD cohort, we have identified a range of potential clinical
endpoints sensitive to disease progression over just 12 months in
premanifest and early Huntington’s disease. Our study shows the
feasibility of rapidly obtaining reliable quantifiable endpoints that
are effective over short periods, across multiple clinical sites, and
consequently shows important potential for future therapeutic trials in
premanifest and early Huntington’s disease.”
