Researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (Penn) have conducted a new study focused on enabling better design of clinical trials for Huntington’s disease patients.

Performed in the form of a survey, the study involved patients at various stages of disease and examined their opinions and treatment objectives.

Discover B2B Marketing That Performs

Combine business intelligence and editorial excellence to reach engaged professionals across 36 leading media platforms.

Find out more

The researchers aimed to understand patients’ views on trial designs that involve non-standard therapies such as intravenous infusions, lumbar punctures or brain surgery.

Penn Neurology department senior genetic counsellor Tanya Bardakjian said: “In order to optimise feasibility, it is important to first understand how potential study participants feel about these new trial designs, with interventions that might involve a higher potential risk but also higher potential reward.”

Furthermore, the study was intended to analyse the responses of different individuals – a potential disease carrier, an asymptomatic genetic carrier and those with Huntington’s disease symptoms.

Out of the 87 respondents who completed the survey of hypothetical questions, 36 were diagnosed with the disease, 18 were carriers of pre-manifesting mutation and 33 were at-risk asymptomatic participants.

GlobalData Strategic Intelligence

US Tariffs are shifting - will you react or anticipate?

Don’t let policy changes catch you off guard. Stay proactive with real-time data and expert analysis.

By GlobalData

In addition to demographic, clinical and genetic background information, the questionnaire captured data on willingness to participate in certain types of trials and opinions about an investigator’s motivation.

While most of the respondents were positive towards participating in a trial, irrespective of design or therapy goals, asymptomatic genetic carriers were observed to be the most willing.

Across all groups, trials involving a placebo were viewed less favourably. Bardakjian said that an option to receive active treatment after the placebo period may address the negative views on a placebo group.

The results, which have been published in the Journal of Huntington’s Disease by the IOS Press, are expected to aid in designing future trials of gene therapies for Huntington’s disease and other genetic disorders.

Clinical Trials Arena Excellence Awards - Nominations Closed

Nominations are now closed for the Clinical Trials Arena Excellence Awards. A big thanks to all the organisations that entered – your response has been outstanding, showcasing exceptional innovation, leadership, and impact.

Excellence in Action
YPrime won the Innovation award for AI in Clinical Trials and the Environmental award for Sustainable Trials, thanks to its eCOA, IRT and eConsent platforms. Explore how purpose-built AI, paperless workflows and circular hardware practices are reshaping timelines, data quality and ESG performance in clinical research.

Discover the Impact