npj Parkinson's Disease (Oct 2022)

Genetically-informed prediction of short-term Parkinson’s disease progression

  • Hossein J. Sadaei,
  • Aldo Cordova-Palomera,
  • Jonghun Lee,
  • Jaya Padmanabhan,
  • Shang-Fu Chen,
  • Nathan E. Wineinger,
  • Raquel Dias,
  • Daria Prilutsky,
  • Sandor Szalma,
  • Ali Torkamani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41531-022-00412-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Parkinson’s disease (PD) treatments modify disease symptoms but have not been shown to slow progression, characterized by gradual and varied motor and non-motor changes overtime. Variation in PD progression hampers clinical research, resulting in long and expensive clinical trials prone to failure. Development of models for short-term PD progression prediction could be useful for shortening the time required to detect disease-modifying drug effects in clinical studies. PD progressors were defined by an increase in MDS-UPDRS scores at 12-, 24-, and 36-months post-baseline. Using only baseline features, PD progression was separately predicted across all timepoints and MDS-UPDRS subparts in independent, optimized, XGBoost models. These predictions plus baseline features were combined into a meta-predictor for 12-month MDS UPDRS Total progression. Data from the Parkinson’s Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI) were used for training with independent testing on the Parkinson’s Disease Biomarkers Program (PDBP) cohort. 12-month PD total progression was predicted with an F-measure 0.77, ROC AUC of 0.77, and PR AUC of 0.76 when tested on a hold-out PPMI set. When tested on PDBP we achieve a F-measure 0.75, ROC AUC of 0.74, and PR AUC of 0.73. Exclusion of genetic predictors led to the greatest loss in predictive accuracy; ROC AUC of 0.66, PR AUC of 0.66–0.68 for both PPMI and PDBP testing. Short-term PD progression can be predicted with a combination of survey-based, neuroimaging, physician examination, and genetic predictors. Dissection of the interplay between genetic risk, motor symptoms, non-motor symptoms, and longer-term expected rates of progression enable generalizable predictions.