Heike Benes1. 1. Somni bene Institute for Medical Research and Sleep Medicine Schwerin Ltd, Arsenalstrasse 10, 19053 Schwerin, Germany. heike.benes@somnibene.de
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Restless legs syndrome (RLS) patients suffer from symptoms not only at bedtime but also with variable circadian patterns. Transdermal application forms of dopamine agonists are expected to lead to a stable plasma concentration of the active drug which could ease treatment for RLS patients with daytime symptoms and avoid side effects of oral dopaminergic therapies. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In this controlled pilot study, 10 patients (six females, four males, mean age 58 years) with severe and long-lasting idiopathic RLS were treated during an initial open-label phase for 2 weeks either with one (n=3 patients) or, if required, two patches of lisuride every other day (dose per patch: 3mg lisuride, nominal effective release rate 7.0 microg lisuride/h). Patients were then randomized to double-blind treatment with lisuride (n=5) or placebo (n=4) for 1 week. RESULTS:Severity of RLS clearly improved during open-label and double-blind treatment with lisuride but became worse under placebo according to the International Restless Legs Syndrome Study Group Rating Scale (IRLS), RLS-6, and Clinical Global Impressions (CGIs) scales, and actigraphy assessments (periodic leg movement index) in the 1-week double-blind period. CONCLUSION: The explorative findings of this small controlled study suggest that lisuride patches might be an efficacious treatment for RLS patients without clinically relevant tolerability problems.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Restless legs syndrome (RLS) patients suffer from symptoms not only at bedtime but also with variable circadian patterns. Transdermal application forms of dopamine agonists are expected to lead to a stable plasma concentration of the active drug which could ease treatment for RLS patients with daytime symptoms and avoid side effects of oral dopaminergic therapies. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In this controlled pilot study, 10 patients (six females, four males, mean age 58 years) with severe and long-lasting idiopathic RLS were treated during an initial open-label phase for 2 weeks either with one (n=3 patients) or, if required, two patches of lisuride every other day (dose per patch: 3mg lisuride, nominal effective release rate 7.0 microg lisuride/h). Patients were then randomized to double-blind treatment with lisuride (n=5) or placebo (n=4) for 1 week. RESULTS: Severity of RLS clearly improved during open-label and double-blind treatment with lisuride but became worse under placebo according to the International Restless Legs Syndrome Study Group Rating Scale (IRLS), RLS-6, and Clinical Global Impressions (CGIs) scales, and actigraphy assessments (periodic leg movement index) in the 1-week double-blind period. CONCLUSION: The explorative findings of this small controlled study suggest that lisuride patches might be an efficacious treatment for RLS patients without clinically relevant tolerability problems.
Authors: R Nisha Aurora; David A Kristo; Sabin R Bista; James A Rowley; Rochelle S Zak; Kenneth R Casey; Carin I Lamm; Sharon L Tracy; Richard S Rosenberg Journal: Sleep Date: 2012-08-01 Impact factor: 5.849
Authors: Guang Jian Liu; Lang Wu; Song Lin Wang; Li Ding; Li Li Xu; Yun Fu Wang; Li Ying Chang Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) Date: 2016-01 Impact factor: 1.817