Thomas Willis Lecture
نویسنده
چکیده
Over the past few decades, preclinical research on stroke has led to tremendous progress in our basic understanding of the pathophysiological events that follow focal cerebral ischemia. Numerous cellular and molecular targets have been identified for brain protective and restorative therapies, and many of these are highly effective in rodents. The incidence and morbidity and mortality of stroke have decreased. Stroke units and recanalization via intravenous tissue-type plasminogen activator or thrombectomy are impressive clinical success stories benefitting many patients. Intriguingly, however, practically none of these clinical breakthroughs are the result of bench-to-bedside translation. On the contrary, almost all therapies that were preclinically successful have failed in patients with actual stroke. This exceedingly high rate of attrition in translational stroke research has already been the subject of many articles. There are no simple explanations, and stroke research is certainly not the only biomedical field struggling with a translational roadblock. In the following, I would like to emphasize factors for which quantitative meta-analytic evidence exists that suggests that they contribute to attrition. My selection is biased toward items in the preclinical realm that pose straightforward opportunities for improvement. Inspired by work from bioethics and from meta-research, I would like to propose, counterintuitively there are instances where we need to embrace attrition. Collectively, I argue for an update of our intellectual framework for translational research. To a large extent, bench-to-bedside translation is a black box. Innumerable factors affect whether and to what extent preclinical evidence is transferable to clinical evidence. Attrition lurks on all levels: preclinically, when moving to first in man, when trying to obtain safety or initial signs of efficacy, and in large clinical trials aiming at regulatory approval.
منابع مشابه
The 2006 Thomas Willis lecture: the adventures of a translational researcher in stroke and migraine.
It is especially meaningful to receive an award honoring Thomas Willis. Besides making seminal contributions to the physiology of the great circle, Willis was the first to assign separate functions to distinct brain regions and the first to number the cranial nerves in the way we identify them today. Willis was also among the earliest translational researchers, although it took 400 years for th...
متن کاملTracks of a non-main path traveler: 2011 Thomas Willis Lecture.
After an unconventional beginning in stroke research, I veered off the main path repeatedly to view problems from a different perspective. In this lecture summary, I would like to return to several points along the byways that led to research with some continuity.
متن کاملThe Adventures of a Translational Researcher in Stroke and Migraine
and Migraine The 2006 Thomas Willis Lecture: The Adventures of a Translational Researcher in Stroke Print ISSN: 0039-2499. Online ISSN: 1524-4628 Copyright © 2007 American Heart Association, Inc. All rights reserved. is published by the American Heart Association, 7272 Greenville Avenue, Dallas, TX 75231 Stroke doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.107.483941 2007;38:1645-1651; originally published online Apr...
متن کاملWinner of the young physician’s section of the Gowers’ prize 2000 Too good to be true? Thomas Willis—neonatal convulsions, childhood stroke and infanticide in seventeenth century England
A case of neonatal convulsion reported by Thomas Willis (1621-1675) together with its post mortem findings is quoted as being congenital intracerebral haemorrhage or strongly suggested as being the earliest pathological description of childhood cerebrovascular disease. However these authors only reviewed the incomplete written record left by Willis, describing how this case was the fourth conse...
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