Toward Biology-Driven Diagnosis of Atypical Parkinsonian Disorders
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Atypical parkinsonian disorders—progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), corticobasal degeneration (CBD), and multiple system atrophy (MSA)—are rare, rapidly progressive neurodegenerative syndromes characterized by distinct molecular pathologies, heterogeneous clinical phenotypes, and limited therapeutic options. Accurate diagnosis remains a major clinical challenge, especially during early and prodromal phases, due to overlap with Parkinson’s disease (PD), phenotypic evolution, and the absence of reliable stand-alone biomarkers. Misclassification delays prognosis, impairs patient care, and hinders clinical trial design. This review synthesizes advances from 2015 to 2025 in clinical, imaging, and biomarker-based diagnosis of PSP, CBD, and MSA. We examine their phenotypic spectra, neuropathological substrates, and epidemiological trends, and critically evaluate the diagnostic performance and translational potential of emerging tools—including quantitative MRI morphometry, second-generation tau and α-synuclein PET ligands, neurophysiological markers such as video-oculography and autonomic testing, and fluid biomarkers such as neurofilament light chain. Persistent diagnostic barriers are identified, from phenotypic mimicry and pathological pleomorphism to the limited specificity of molecular assays and inequitable access to advanced technologies. We propose tiered, multimodal diagnostic algorithms that integrate structured clinical phenotyping with quantitative imaging, molecular diagnostics, systemic risk profiling, and autopsy-linked validation. Such biology-anchored approaches could enable diagnosis years before classical features emerge, improve patient stratification for disease-modifying trials, and lay the foundation for precision medicine in atypical parkinsonian disorders. A paradigm shift from descriptive nosology to mechanistically grounded frameworks is essential to accelerate early intervention and transform the clinical management of these devastating diseases.