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Review
. 2024 Aug;13(4):975-1013.
doi: 10.1007/s40120-024-00614-9. Epub 2024 May 14.

Pharmacotherapies for the Treatment of Progressive Supranuclear Palsy: A Narrative Review

Affiliations
Review

Pharmacotherapies for the Treatment of Progressive Supranuclear Palsy: A Narrative Review

Elise E Dunning et al. Neurol Ther. 2024 Aug.

Abstract

Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a neurodegenerative disorder resulting from the deposition of misfolded and neurotoxic forms of tau protein in specific areas of the midbrain, basal ganglia, and cortex. It is one of the most representative forms of tauopathy. PSP presents in several different phenotypic variations and is often accompanied by the development of concurrent neurodegenerative disorders. PSP is universally fatal, and effective disease-modifying therapies for PSP have not yet been identified. Several tau-targeting treatment modalities, including vaccines, monoclonal antibodies, and microtubule-stabilizing agents, have been investigated and have had no efficacy. The need to treat PSP and other tauopathies is critical, and many clinical trials investigating tau-targeted treatments are underway. In this review, the PubMed database was queried to collect information about preclinical and clinical research on PSP treatment. Additionally, the US National Library of Medicine's ClinicalTrials.gov website was queried to identify past and ongoing clinical trials relevant to PSP treatment. This narrative review summarizes our findings regarding these reports, which include potential disease-modifying drug trials, modifiable risk factor management, and symptom treatments.

Keywords: Clinical trials; Microtubule dysfunction; Modifiable risk factor; Monoclonal antibody; Progressive supranuclear palsy; Tau; Tau phosphorylation.

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Conflict of interest statement

Elise E. Dunning and Boris Decourt have nothing to disclose. Nasser H. Zawia discloses ownership of NeuroTau. Holly A. Shill has received research support from Intra-cellular Therapeutics, Transposon, Parkinson Study Group/UCB, Parkinson’s Foundation, NINDS, Supernus/US World Meds, MJFF, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Barrow Neurological Foundation and Cerevel Therapeutics. She has served as a consultant for the Parkinson Study Group/Nq, Biogen, Abbvie, Sage/Biogen, Praxis, KeifeRx, and Fasikl and Jazz Pharmaceuticals. Marwan N. Sabbagh discloses ownership interest (stock or stock options) in NeuroTau, uMethod Health, Lighthouse Pharmaceuticals, and Athira; he consults for Alzheon, Biogen, Roche-Genentech, T3D, Eisai, Lilly, and KeifeRx.

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