| Literature DB >> 27988871 |
Emma M Coppen1, Raymund A C Roos2.
Abstract
There are currently no effective pharmacological agents available to stop or prevent the progression of Huntington's disease (HD), a rare hereditary neurodegenerative disorder. In addition to psychiatric symptoms and cognitive impairments, HD causes progressive motor disturbances, in particular choreiform movements, which are characterized by unwanted contractions of the facial muscles, trunk and extremities. Management of choreiform movements is usually advised if chorea interferes with daily functioning, causes social isolation, gait instability, falls, or physical injury. Although drugs to reduce chorea are available, only few randomized controlled studies have assessed the efficacy of these drugs, resulting in a high variety of prescribed drugs in clinical practice. The current pharmacological treatment options to reduce chorea in HD are outlined in this review, including the latest results on deutetrabenazine, a newly developed pharmacological agent similar to tetrabenazine, but with suggested less peak dose side effects. A review of the existing literature was conducted using the PubMed, Cochrane and Medline databases. In conclusion, mainly tetrabenazine, tiapride (in European countries), olanzapine, and risperidone are the preferred first choice drugs to reduce chorea among HD experts. In the existing literature, these drugs also show a beneficial effect on motor symptom severity and improvement of psychiatric symptoms. Generally, it is recommended to start with a low dose and increase the dose with close monitoring of any adverse effects. New interesting agents, such as deutetrabenazine and pridopidine, are currently under development and more randomized controlled trials are warranted to assess the efficacy on chorea severity in HD.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 27988871 PMCID: PMC5216093 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-016-0670-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 9.546
Overview of reviewed clinical trials
| Drug | Authors (year) | Study design | Treatment (number of participants) | Treatment duration | Dosage | Most relevant clinical findings | Significant endpoint changes? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tetrabenazine | TETRA-HD, HSG [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | Tetrabenazine ( | 12 weeks | Titration dose 12.5 mg, max 100 mg daily dose | 5.0-unit (23.5%) reduction in UHDRS chorea score in tetrabenazine group | Yes |
| Frank [ | Long-term open-label of TETRA-HD | Tetrabenazine ( | 80 weeks | Individual dosage (mean: 63.4 mg/day), max 200 mg daily dose | 4.6-unit reduction in UHDRS chorea score | Yes | |
| Deutetrabenazine | FIRST-HD, HSG [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | Deutetrabenazine ( | 12 weeks, 1 week washout | Up-titration weekly with 6 mg/day, mean dosage: 39.7 mg/day, max 48 mg daily dose | 2.5 unit reduction in UHDRS chorea score and 4.0 reduction in UHDRS total motor score in deutetrabenazine group | Yes |
| Tiapride | Roos et al. [ | Double-blind, controlled, crossover | Tiapride: placebo ( | 2 × 2 weeks | 300 mg daily dose | No significant effect on choreiform movements | No |
| Deroover et al. [ | Randomized, double-blind, crossover | Tiapride: tiapride: placebo ( | 3 × 3 weeks | 3000 mg daily dose | Reduction of choreiform movements in head, trunk, upper and lower limbs | Yes | |
| Clozapine | Caine et al. [ | Randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover | Clozapine: placebo ( | 2 × 4–7 weeks | Individual dose; range 60–500 mg daily dose | Decreased abnormal involuntary movements in 2 patients | No |
| Bonuccelli et al. [ | Open-label | Clozapine ( | 3 weeks | Up-titration weekly with 50 mg/day, max 150 mg daily dose | 5.8 reduction on AIMS score | Yes | |
| van Vugt et al. [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | Clozapine ( | 31 days | Max 150 mg daily dose | 0.7-unit reduction of chorea in UHDRS chorea score | No | |
| Olanzapine | Squitieri et al. [ | Open-label | Olanzapine ( | 6 months | 5 mg/day | Reduction of 1.6 units in UHDRS chorea score | No |
| Bonelli et al. [ | Open-label | Olanzapine ( | 2 weeks | Individual dosage, (mean: 15.6 mg/day), max 30 mg daily dose | 6.5-unit reduction in UHDRS chorea score and 16.0 units reduction in UHDRS total motor score | Yes | |
| Paleacu et al. [ | Open-label | Olanzapine ( | 6 weeks–1 year | Individual dosage, (mean 11.4 mg/day), max 30 mg daily dose | 6.5-unit mean reduction in UHDRS-TMS | No | |
| Risperidone | Duff et al. [ | Retrospective chart analysis | Risperidone ( | 1 year | Mean dosage 2.5 mg/day | Worsening of 1.7 units in UHDRS total motor score in risperidone group compared to 6.1 units worsening in control group over 1-year period | Yes |
| Quetiapine | No clinical trials performed, only case-reports available | ||||||
| Haloperidol | Koller and Trimble [ | Open-label | Haloperidol ( | Unknown | Individual dosage, ranging between 2 and 80 mg /day | Decrease of abnormal involuntary movement score with 12.7 units after treatment with haloperidol | Yes |
| Girotti et al. [ | Open-label, crossover | Pimozide ( | 4 weeks, 15-day washout in between if more then one drug | Pimozide: mean 13.8 mg/day | Pimozide and haloperidol reduce abnormal involuntary movements. Tiapride had no effect on involuntary movements | No | |
| Sulpiride | Quinn and Marsden [ | Randomized, double-blind, crossover trial | Sulpiride: placebo ( | 2 × 4 weeks, 1 week washout | 300 mg/day, increased with 300 mg each week (max 1200 mg/day) | Reduction of movement count and total dyskinesia score in sulpiride group | Yes |
| Amantadine | Verhagen et al. [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover | Amantadine: placebo ( | 2 × 2 weeks | 400 mg daily dose | Reduction in median UHDRS chorea | Yes |
| O’Suilleabhain and Dewey [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover | Amantadine: placebo ( | 2 × 2 weeks | 300 mg daily dose | No change in chorea score between placebo and amantadine | No | |
| Lucetti et al. [ | Open-label | Amantadine ( | 1 year | 100 mg daily dose | 9.0-unit reduction in UHDRS motor score and 7.0-unit reduction in AIMS score | Yes | |
| Riluzole | HSG [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | Riluzole 100 mg/day ( | 8 weeks | 100 mg daily dose or 200 mg daily dose | 2.2-unit reduction in UHDRS chorea score in riluzole 200 mg/day group | Yes |
| Landwehrmeyer et al. [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | Riluzole ( | 3 years | 50 mg twice daily | No effect on chorea score between placebo and riluzole | No | |
| Aripiprazole | Brusa et al. [ | Randomized, double-blind, crossover | Aripiprazole: tetrabenazine ( | 2 × 3 months, 3 weeks washout | Individual dosage | Reduction of 5.2 units in UHDRS chorea score for aripiprazole and 5.4-unit reduction in chorea score for tetrabenazine | Yes |
| Pridopidine | Lundin et al. [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | Pridopidine ( | 4 weeks | 50 mg daily dose | 2.8-unit improvement with pridopidine on the mMs compared to 0.9-unit improvement with placebo | No |
| MermaiHD, De Yebenes et al. [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | Pridopidine 45 mg ( | 6 months | 45 mg or 90 mg daily dose | Mean reduction of 0.99 units in the mMS in pridopidine 90-mg group. Significant reduction of 2.96 units on UHDRS total motor score in pridopidine 90-mg group compared to placebo | No | |
| HART, HSG [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled (Phase IIb) | Pridopidine 20 mg ( | 12 weeks | 20, 45, 90 mg daily dose | Reduction of 1.19 and 1.17 units on mMS for 45-mg and 90-mg pridopidine groups, respectively, compared to placebo. Significant reduction of UHDRS TMS of -0.90 units in 90-mg pridopidine group compared to placebo | No | |
UHDRS Unified Huntington’s disease Rating Scale, HSG Huntington Study Group, AIMS Abnormal Involuntary Movements Scale, mMS modified motor score (derived from the UHDRS)
Most frequently prescribed drugs for chorea in Huntington’s disease (HD)
| Drug | Adverse effects | Contraindications | Drug interactions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tetrabenazine | Depression, somnolence, parkinsonism, insomnia, akathisia, anxiety, nausea | Active depression or suicidal ideation, psychosis, impaired hepatic function, concomitant use of MAO-inhibitors | Reduce tetrabenazine dose with concomitant use of fluoxetine and paroxetine |
| Olanzapine | Sedation, weight gain, dry mouth, Parkinsonism | None specific | Drugs that induce CYP1A2 enzymes (carbamazepine, omeprazole, rifampin) may reduce olanzapine plasma levels. CYP1A2 inhibitors (estrogens, fluvoxamine) may increase plasma levels |
| Risperidone | Parkinsonism, akathisia, sedation, hyperprolactinemia | None specific | Drugs that induce CYP3A4 enzymes (carbamazepine, phenobarbital, phenytoin) may reduce risperidone plasma levels. Fluoxetine and paroxetine can increase plasma concentration |
| Tiapridea | Sedation, parkinsonism | Prolactin-dependent tumors, history of QT-prolongation | Concomitant use of levodopa or other dopamine agonists is contraindicated. Sedative effect of tiapride can be increased in combination with antidepressants, benzodiazepines and opioids |
| Quetiapine | Weight gain, dry mouth, parkinsonism, sedation, akathisia | History of QT-prolongation, neutropenia | CYP3A4 inhibitors (clarithromycin, erythromycin, ketoconazole) can increase quetiapine plasma levels. Increase quetiapine dose with concomitant use of CYP3A4 enzyme inducers (carbamazepine, rifampin, phenytoin, glucocorticoids) |
| Aripiprazole | Sedation, parkinsonism, akathisia, cardiac arrhythmias | None specific | CYP2A4 or CYP2D6 inhibitors (ketoconazole, quinidine, fluoxetine, paroxetine) can inhibit aripiprazole elimination and cause increased blood levels. Concomitant use of serotonergic drugs can increase risk of serotonergic syndrome |
| Clozapine | Orthostatic hypotension, sedation, weight gain, increased seizure risk, agranulocytosis | Myeloproliferative disorders, history of agranulocytosis, uncontrolled epilepsy, paralytic ileus, or hepatic dysfunction | Reduce dose when combining with fluvoxamine and paroxetine. Drugs that induce cytochrome P450 enzymes may decrease clozapine plasma levels |
| Haloperidol | Tardive dyskinesia, sedation, parkinsonism, akathisia, tachycardia | Coma, history of QT prolongation or other clinical significant cardiac diseases | CYP3A4 or CYP2D6 isoenzymes inhibitors (venlafaxine, fluvoxamine, sertraline, buspirone, and alprazolam) |
| Sulpiride | Sedation, parkinsonism, hyperprolactinemia, akathisia, weight gain | Pheochromocytoma, prolactin-dependent tumors (such as pituitary tumors, breast cancer) | Concomitant use of levodopa or other dopamine agonists is contraindicated |
| Amantadine | Insomnia, hallucinations, anxiety, agitation, cardiac arrhythmias, dry mouth | Refractory epilepsy, psychosis, acute glaucoma | Adverse effects of anticholinergic drugs may be increased with concomitant use of amantadine. Quinine can reduce the renal clearance of amantadine |
Drugs listed in this table are the most commonly prescribed drugs for the treatment of chorea based on international surveys among HD experts and registered HD patients (Priller et al. [11], Orth et al. [25], Burgunder et al. [10]). Most commonly reported adverse effects, contraindications, and drug interactions are described (Brown et al. [64], Videnovic [59])
aTiapride is only available in European countries
Ongoing clinical trials for treatment of chorea in Huntington’s disease
| Study | Phase | Design | Study agent | Outcome measures | Trial length |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ARC-HD (NCT01897896) | III | Multicenter, open-label, long-term safety extension study of FIRST-HD | Deutetrabenazine 6, 9, or 12 mg/day | Incidence of adverse events, change from baseline in clinical laboratory parameters, vital signs and UHDRS | Up to 58 weeks |
| NCT02197130 | II | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled efficacy and safety study | PF-02545920 5 mg and 20 mg/day | Change from baseline in UHDRS- TMS and total maximum chorea score | 26 weeks |
| NEUROHD (NCT00632645) | III | Multicenter, randomized, controlled comparison study | Olanzapine 2.5–20 mg/day | Change in independence, motor, psychiatric and cognitive scales, assessment of adverse effects | 52 weeks |
| PRIDE-HD (NCT02006472) | II b | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled safety and efficacy study | Pridopidine 45, 67.5, 90, 112.5 mg twice daily | Change from baseline in UHDRS-TMS and mPPT | 26 and 52 weeks |
| Open-Hart (NCT01306929) | II | North-American, long-term open-label extension study of PRIDE-HD | Pridopidine 45 mg | Number of adverse events, development of UHDRS-TMS over time | Up to 2 years |
| Open-Pride (NCT02494778) | II | Multicenter, open-label safety, tolerability and efficacy extension study of PRIDE-HD | Pridopidine 45 mg twice daily | Percentage of participants with adverse events, change in UHDRS-TMS over time | 2 years |
| Legato (NCT02215616) | II | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled efficacy and safety study | Laquinimod 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 mg/day | Change from baseline in UHDRS-TMS, percent change in caudate volume and HD-CAB total score | 12 months |
| Trihep3 (NCT02453061) | II | Randomized, double-blind, controlled study | Triheptanoin oil 1 g/kg/day | Change in index of brain energy restoration using 31-P MRS and change of caudate atrophy rate using MRI. Change in motor function | 6 and 12 months |
Information on current ongoing clinical trials investigating the efficacy on chorea in patients with Huntington’s disease obtained from http://www.clinicaltrials.gov [accessed 16 August 2016]
HD Huntington’s disease, UHDRS–TMS Unified Huntington’s Disease Rating Scale–Total Motor Score, mPPT modified Physical Performance Test, 31-P MRS 31-Phosophorus Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, HD-CAB Huntington’s Disease Cognitive Assessment Battery
| Tetrabenazine is the only drug approved by the US FDA for the treatment of chorea in Huntington’s disease (HD). Monitoring for adverse effects such as depressive symptoms and suicidal behavior is warranted, especially in patients with a history of depression. |
| In addition to a beneficial effect on chorea, olanzapine, risperidone, and tiapride also seem to have a positive effect on sleep dysfunction, mood disturbances, and the prevention of weight loss. |
| Potential dopamine-stabilizing and -depleting drugs to reduce motor symptoms in HD are currently under investigation in large multicenter clinical trials. |