Huntington's Disease Clinical Trials: Innovation, Challenges, And The Road Ahead
By Sebastian Turek, Executive Director, Program Strategy and Delivery, Internal Medicine & Neuroscience

Huntington’s disease (HD), a devastating hereditary neurodegenerative disorder, has long posed formidable challenges to researchers and clinicians. Historically constrained by limited treatment options and complex pathophysiology, the HD landscape is now undergoing rapid transformation driven by breakthroughs in gene-targeted therapies, small molecule modulators, regenerative medicine, and digital innovation.
Gene silencing approaches—including antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs), RNA interference, and CRISPR gene editing—are redefining disease modification strategies. Prominent investigational agents such as tominersen, WVE-003, and AMT-130 are showing early signs of clinical benefit, targeting the root genetic cause of HD with increasing specificity. Complementing these advances, regenerative therapies and digital biomarkers are expanding the scope of what's possible. Stem cell-based trials, fluid biomarkers (mHTT, NfL), and wearable sensors are collectively reshaping trial design—enhancing sensitivity, enabling decentralization, and enriching real-world data collection.
Yet, challenges remain—from complex trial logistics and patient recruitment to endpoint variability. Overcoming these requires integrated, global strategies, close collaboration with patient communities, and agile, neuroscience-focused CRO partners. Together, these efforts are not just accelerating drug development—they're redefining hope for the HD community.
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