TPIDB > Outstanding PI
Outstanding PI
2026 Psychiatry
2026 Medical Oncology
2026 Infectious Disease
2026 Obstetrics and Gynecology
2026 Nephrology
2026 Orthopedics
2026 Thoracic Surgery
2026 Thoracic Medicine
2026 Neurology
2026 Gastroenterological Surgery
2026 Digestive System
2026 Family Medicine
2026 Rheumatology
2026 Urology
2026 Hematology & Oncology
2026 Otolaryngology
2026 General Surgery
2026 Cardiovascular Diseases
2026 Endocrinology
2026 Pediatrics
Highlights
Number of Clinical Trials 11
Dr. Lin is a professor in Department of Neurology, National Taiwan University Hospital. Her main research interests include Parkinson’s disease (PD), movement disorders, neurodegenerative disorders and young-onset Parkinson’s disease. Dr. Lin is active in many steering committees of International Movement Disorder Society. In addition to clinical studies, Dr. Lin investigated the molecular mechanisms of mutations of Parkinson’s disease or dystonia causative genes in neuronal degeneration by using cellular and animal model systems, and also involved in establishing biomarkers reflecting disease progression of Parkinson’s disease. Dr. Lin has established transgenic Drosophila and mice model of PD to investigate the molecular mechanism leading to neurodegeneration. Based on these PD models, Dr. Lin has screened a bank of FDA-approven drug library and identified Lovastatin could mitigate dopaminergic neuron degeneration. Dr. Lin then raised a principal-investigator initiated phase II, double-blind, placebo controlled clinical trial exploring the neuroprotective effects of Lovastatin in patients with early-stage and drug naive PD. The results showed a beneficial effects and contributes to the mechanism-targeted therapy in the field of PD. Dr. Lin was invited to share the result of this trial in the 13th Alzheimer's & Parkinson's Diseases Congress - AD/PD™ in Vienna, Austria in 2017. She is now a leading PI in a phase II trial for a novel 18F-PMPBB3 (APN-1607) PET imaging tracer in differentiating patients with Parkinsonism syndrome from PD. Dr. Lin is now serving as a president of Taiwan Movement Disorder Society.