Thirty years ago, Michael J. Fox would never have believed you if you told him he’d be talking cell biology instead of talking on a cell phone. For the actor who played time-traveler Marty McFly in the “Back to the Future” series, a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease (PD) wasn’t something he saw coming from the driver’s seat of his DeLorean.
But on Back to the Future Day — October 21, 2015, the “future” in the 1989 hit “Back to the Future Part II” — Fox knows one thing for certain: One day, not just Parkinson’s disease but all neurological diseases will be no more than a memory. “And if we all eventually get hoverboards, well – that’s a bonus,” he quipped in an email open letter published by the White House on Wednesday morning.
With the subject line, “Today, we’re in the future,” Fox’s email boldly challenges his fellow Americans to imagine the world in which they want to live in the next three decades. While not everyone is destined to be a scientist studying the human brain, each of us can play a part, Fox asserts.
“One reason Parkinson’s research has come so far in the past 15 years is that people and families living with the disease have stepped up as advocates and innovators themselves, working to build the future we all want,” he wrote.
In honor of Back to the Future Day, the CEO of The Michael J. Fox Foundation, Dr. Todd Sherer, spoke with MSNBC about what Fox himself described as “a future in which we can treat, cure, and even prevent brain diseases like Parkinson’s.”
MSNBC: Deep-brain stimulation, or DBS, is the only major new treatment to come along for Parkinson’s in the last two decades. Are new treatments around the corner? How is The Michael J. Fox Foundation leading the charge?
Sherer: In the nearly 200 years since Dr. James Parkinson first described this disease, patients’ greatest unmet need has remained the same: a treatment that can slow or stop the disease’s inexorable progression in the brain, not just temporarily alleviate symptoms (like levodopa, commercialized in 1967, and the gold-standard PD treatment to this day).
Now, thanks in large part to the genetics revolution over the past 15 years, Parkinson’s researchers have seeded a rich pipeline of potentially disease-modifying drugs. Several are showing unprecedented promise and advancing through clinical trials closer to practical relevance for patients. A bevy of next-generation symptomatic therapies also are moving closer to market.
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The Michael J. Fox Foundation (MJFF) drives these studies with financial support mostly from people with Parkinson’s disease and their families (over $525 million to date) and by working to solve field-wide problems that slow the pace of research. We’re sponsoring studies toward better, objective measures of disease that will allow us to identify individuals at risk and speed testing of new therapies. We’re galvanizing patients and families to greater engagement in research overall — from participating in traditional clinical studies to leveraging technology-enabled solutions to amplify the patient voice in setting research direction.
MSNBC: Over the next 52 years, the senior population in this country is set to double. What impact will this have on Parkinson’s? Is it time to act with an increased urgency?








