Literature DB >> 24007304

Mavoglurant (AFQ056) in combination with increased levodopa dosages in Parkinson's disease patients.

Rajeev Kumar1, Robert A Hauser2, Joseph Mostillo3, Nalina Dronamraju3, Ana Graf4, Martin Merschhemke4, Christopher Kenney3.   

Abstract

Long-term use of levodopa (L-dopa) in patients with Parkinson's disease is associated with development of dyskinesia. This study explored whether Parkinson's disease patients with L-dopa-induced dyskinesia experience improved OFF-time from higher L-dopa doses without worsening of dyskinesias when receiving adjunctive mavoglurant. Patients with moderate-to-severe L-dopa-induced dyskinesia were randomized to receive mavoglurant or placebo. Mavoglurant (AFQ056) was up-titrated over two weeks from 25 mg twice daily (bid) to 100 mg bid (L-dopa kept stable), followed by three weeks during which the daily L-dopa dosage was increased by up to 300 mg/day. A sample size of 30 was initially planned; however, the study was terminated prematurely due to enrollment challenges. OFF-time showed greater improvements in the mavoglurant group (n = 7) compared with the placebo group (n = 7); difference at week 5 was -2.77 h (90% confidence interval -5.44, -0.09 h; p = 0.09). ON-time without troublesome dyskinesia increased more from baseline to week 5 in the mavoglurant group (4.38 h) versus the placebo group (0.63 h). Clinician-rated measures were conflicting. The Modified Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale scores showed a slight improvement with mavoglurant compared with placebo, while the Unified Dyskinesia Rating Scale parts III and IV worsened slightly with mavoglurant compared with placebo. Due to the low patient numbers and conflicting clinician-rated outcomes data, our findings are not conclusive. However, our results suggest that mavoglurant combined with higher doses of L-dopa may be effective in treating patients with Parkinson's disease experiencing L-dopa-related motor fluctuations and dyskinesias.

Entities:  

Keywords:  AFQ056; Parkinson's disease; dyskinesia; levodopa; mavoglurant

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 24007304     DOI: 10.3109/00207454.2013.841685

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Neurosci        ISSN: 0020-7454            Impact factor:   2.292


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