| Literature DB >> 27403743 |
Andreas Hartmann1, Julia Müllner1, Niklaus Meier1, Helke Hesekamp1, Priscilla van Meerbeeck1, Marie-Odile Habert2, Aurélie Kas2, Marie-Laure Tanguy3, Merry Mazmanian3, Hervé Oya3, Nissen Abuaf4, Hafida Gaouar4, Sabrina Salhi5, Fanny Charbonnier-Beaupel6, Marie-Hélène Fievet6, Damien Galanaud7, Sophie Arguillere1, Emmanuel Roze1, Bertrand Degos1, David Grabli1, Lucette Lacomblez1, Cécile Hubsch1, Marie Vidailhet1, Anne-Marie Bonnet1, Jean-Christophe Corvol1, Michael Schüpbach1.
Abstract
In the present study, we examined the potential symptomatic and/or disease-modifying effects of monthly bee venom injections compared to placebo in moderatly affected Parkinson disease patients. We conducted a prospective, randomized double-blind study in 40 Parkinson disease patients at Hoehn & Yahr stages 1.5 to 3 who were either assigned to monthly bee venom injections or equivalent volumes of saline (treatment/placebo group: n = 20/20). The primary objective of this study was to assess a potential symptomatic effect of s.c. bee venom injections (100 μg) compared to placebo 11 months after initiation of therapy on United Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) III scores in the « off » condition pre-and post-injection at a 60 minute interval. Secondary objectives included the evolution of UPDRS III scores over the study period and [123I]-FP-CIT scans to evaluate disease progression. Finally, safety was assessed by monitoring specific IgE against bee venom and skin tests when necessary. After an 11 month period of monthly administration, bee venom did not significantly decrease UPDRS III scores in the « off » condition. Also, UPDRS III scores over the study course, and nuclear imaging, did not differ significantly between treatment groups. Four patients were excluded during the trial due to positive skin tests but no systemic allergic reaction was recorded. After an initial increase, specific IgE against bee venom decreased in all patients completing the trial. This study did not evidence any clear symptomatic or disease-modifying effects of monthly bee venom injections over an 11 month period compared to placebo using a standard bee venom allergy desensitization protocol in Parkinson disease patients. However, bee venom administration appeared safe in non-allergic subjects. Thus, we suggest that higher administration frequency and possibly higher individual doses of bee venom may reveal its potency in treating Parkinson disease. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01341431.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27403743 PMCID: PMC4942057 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0158235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Study Flowchart.
Baseline characteristics in the placebo / bee venom groups.
| Placebo (Median ; Interquartile range) | Bee venom (Median ; Interquartile range) | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 63.3 ; 8 | 60.3 ; 15 |
| Time since diagnosis (years) | 5.6 ; 4 | 5.9 ; 4.4 |
| Time since first symptoms (years) | 6.3 ; 5.1 | 6.2 ; 5 |
| BREF | 17 ; 0.5 | 17 ; 1.5 |
| MMS | 30 ; 2 | 29 ; 2 |
| UPDRS I | 1 ; 1 | 1 ; 2 |
| UPDRS II | 10.5 ; 7 | 9.5 ; 5 |
| UPDRS III (off) | 29 ; 16 | 25 ; 11 |
| UPDRS IV | 3; 2.5 | 3.5; 3.5 |
| Schwab and England scores | ||
| - 70 | 2 (10%) | 0 |
| - 80 | 13 (65%) | 9 (45%) |
| - 90 | 4 (20%) | 9 (45%) |
| - 100 | 1 (5%) | 2 (10%) |
| Hoehn and Yahr stages | ||
| - 2 | 7 (35%) | 6 (30%) |
| - 2.5 | 11 (55%) | 14 (70%) |
| - 3 | 2 (10%) | 0 |
| PDQ-39 –summary index | 22.6; 20 | 24.7 ; 12.7 |
| LED | 512 ; 450 | 391 ; 306 |
Main results in the placebo / bee venom groups.
| Placebo | Bee venom | P-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| UPDRS III at V13: variation after injection | |||
| - Median, Interquartile range | 1 ; 4.5 | 1 ; 2 | 0.86 |
| - Mean, standard deviation | 0.35 ; 2.85 | 0.72 ; 2.37 | |
| UPDRS III before injection | - 0.11 (0.08) | -0.03 (0.08) | 0.23 |
| UPDRS I before injection | -0.03 (0.02) | -0.015 (0.018) | 0.67 |
| UPDRS II before injection | -0.087 (0.04) | 0.013 (0.04) | 0.08 |
| UPDRS IV before injection | 0.009 (0.02) | - 0.023 (0.02) | 0.32 |
| Hoehn and Yahr stages | -0.0009 (0.0001) | -0.0007 (0.0001) | 0.3 |
| Schwab and England scores | 0.005 (0.003) | -0.001 (0.003) | 0.09 |
| BREF | |||
| - Median, interquartile range | 0 ; 1 | 0 ; 0.5 | 0.22 |
| - Mean, standard deviation | 0 ; 1.5 | -0.2 ; 1 | |
| MMS | |||
| - Median, interquartile range | 0 ; 2 | 0 ; 1 | 0.13 |
| - Mean, standard deviation | - 0.2 ; 1.6 | 0.7 ; 1.04 | |
| LED | |||
| - Median, interquartile range | 51 ; 129 | 0 ; 162.7 | 0.22 |
| - Mean, standard deviation | 98; 156 | 64 ; 127 | |
| PDQ-39 | |||
| - Median, interquartile range | -1.5 ; 9.2 | 2.2; 13.5 | 0.6 |
| - Mean, standard deviation | -1.2 ; 5.4 | -0.3; 7.5 |
* Data are presented with estimates of monthly variation and its standard error (regression parameters of the linear mixed model for repeated data)
Fig 2Evolution of the differences of UPDRS III (A), II (B) and total scores (C) with baseline over the 11 month study period in the placebo and bee venom groups.
Comparison of [123I]-FP-CIT binding potential changes between V2 and V13 in the placebo / bee venom groups.
| Region | Placebo (mean ± standard deviation) | Bee venom (mean ± standard deviation) | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Caudate (right hemisphere) | -0.111 ± 0.194 | -0.093 ± 0.193 | 0.56 |
| Caudate (left hemisphere) | -0.121 ± 0.210 | -0.079 ± 0.188 | 0.41 |
| Anterior putamen (right hemisphere) | -0.115 ± 0.215 | -0.108 ± 0.206 | 0.97 |
| Anterior putamen (left hemisphere) | -0.062 ± 0.138 | -0.037 ± 0.198 | 0.62 |
| Posterior putamen (right hemisphere) | -0.019 ± 0.163 | -0.067 ± 0.170 | 0.62 |
| Posterior putamen (left hemisphere) | -0.026 ± 0.202 | -0.010 ± 0.194 | 0.99 |
Fig 3Kinetics of bee venom specific antibodies.
The sample at day -60 was taken at the pre-screening, the first bee venom injection was done at day 0 and the first sample after at day 30. Diamonds are for specific IgE (kU/L) and the squares for specific IgG4 (mg/L). (A)kinetics of specific IgE production for all patients; (B) kinetics for specific IgE and IgG4 for a single representative patient.