Dekker Marieke C J, Coulibaly Toumany, Bardien Soraya, Ross Owen A, Carr Jonathan, Komolafe Morenikeji
Department of Medicine and Pediatrics, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre, Moshi, Tanzania.
Service de Neurologie, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire du Point "G", Bamako, Mali.
Front Neurol. 2020 Jun 19;11:512. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00512. eCollection 2020.
The burden of Parkinson's disease (PD) is becoming increasingly important in the context of an aging African population. Although PD has been extensively investigated with respect to its environmental and genetic etiology in various populations across the globe, studies on the African continent remain limited. In this Perspective article, we review some of the obstacles that are limiting research and creating barriers for future studies. We summarize what research is being done in four sub-Saharan countries and what the key elements are that are needed to take research to the next level. We note that there is large variation in neurological and genetic research capacity across the continent, and many opportunities for unexplored areas in African PD research. Only a handful of countries possess appropriate infrastructure and personnel, whereas the majority have yet to develop such capacity. Resource-constrained environments strongly determines the possibilities of performing research locally, and unidirectional export of biological samples and genetic data remains a concern. Local-regional partnerships, in collaboration with global PD consortia, should form an ethically appropriate solution, which will lead to a reduction in inequality and promote capacity building on the African continent.
在非洲人口老龄化的背景下,帕金森病(PD)的负担正变得越来越重要。尽管全球各地的不同人群对PD的环境和遗传病因进行了广泛研究,但非洲大陆的相关研究仍然有限。在这篇观点文章中,我们回顾了一些限制研究以及为未来研究设置障碍的因素。我们总结了撒哈拉以南四个国家正在开展的研究,以及将研究提升到新水平所需的关键要素。我们注意到,非洲大陆的神经学和遗传学研究能力差异很大,非洲PD研究中仍有许多未探索领域存在机会。只有少数国家具备适当的基础设施和人员,而大多数国家尚未发展出这种能力。资源受限的环境极大地决定了在当地开展研究的可能性,生物样本和遗传数据的单向输出仍然令人担忧。与全球PD联盟合作的地方-区域伙伴关系应形成一种符合伦理的适当解决方案,这将减少不平等现象,并促进非洲大陆的能力建设。