| Literature DB >> 28725704 |
K Ray Chaudhuri1,2, Mubasher A Qamar1,2, Thadshani Rajah1,2, Philipp Loehrer1,2,3, Anna Sauerbier1,2, Per Odin4,5, Peter Jenner6.
Abstract
Dysfunction of the gastrointestinal tract has now been recognized to affect all stages of Parkinson's disease (PD). The consequences lead to problems with absorption of oral medication, erratic treatment response, as well as silent aspiration, which is one of the key risk factors in developing pneumonia. The issue is further complicated by other gut abnormalities, such as small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO) and an altered gut microbiota, which occur in PD with variable frequency. Clinically, these gastrointestinal abnormalities might be associated with symptoms such as nausea, early-morning "off", and frequent motor and non-motor fluctuations. Therefore, non-oral therapies that avoid the gastrointestinal system seem a rational option to overcome the problems of oral therapies in PD. Hence, several non-oral strategies have now been actively investigated and developed. The transdermal rotigotine patch, infusion therapies with apomorphine, intrajejunal levodopa, and the apomorphine pen strategy are currently in clinical use with a few others in development. In this review, we discuss and summarize the most recent developments in this field with a focus on non-oral dopaminergic strategies (excluding surgical interventions such as deep brain stimulation) in development or to be licensed for management of PD.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28725704 PMCID: PMC5516582 DOI: 10.1038/npjparkd.2016.23
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 2373-8057
Figure 1The problems of oral therapy in Parkinson’s disease in relation to various pathologies within the upper gastrointestinal system. Poor levodopa absorption could be the chief cause of many variants of levodopa-induced motor fluctuations. H. Pylori, Helicobacter pylori; SIBO, small intestine bacterial overgrowth.
Existing and “in development” levodopa-based treatment strategies
| Subcutaneous | Levodopa belt pump | In development (phase 2 CT) |
| Subcutaneous/transdermal | Levodopa patch–pump | In development (phase 2 CT) |
| Intrajejunal infusion | Levodopa-carbidopa gel | In clinical use |
| TriGel | In development (phase 1 CT) | |
| Inhaled | Levodopa powder (CVT-301) | In development (phase 3 CT) |
Abbreviation: CT, Clinical trial; TriGel, levodopa carbidopa entacopone (liquid form).
Figure 2Levodopa patch–pump[29] (permission granted by NeuroDerm).
Figure 3Levodopa belt pump[29] (permission granted by NeuroDerm).
Figure 4Apomorphine subcutaneous infusion.
Non-levodopa-based treatment strategies
| Subcutaneous | Apomorphine infusion (pump) | In clinical use |
| Apomorphine injection (pen) | In clinical use | |
| Apormorphine patch–pump (ND0701) | In use, but not widely? | |
| Rotigotine polyoxazoline conjugate (SER-214) | In development (phase 1) and clinical studies on rat models published | |
| Transdermal (patch) | Rotigotine | In clinical use as monotherapy and combined therapy |
| Apomorphine (APO-MTD) | One clinical study with positive results in clinical motor efficacy and long action but no further studies | |
| Buccal/sublingual | Apomorphine (APL-130277) | In development (phase 3) |
| Zydis Selegiline | In development (ongoing phase 4) | |
| Piribedil | Halted development | |
| Inhaled | Apomorphine (VR040) | In development (post-phase 2 clinical trial) |
| Intranasal rotigotine | Completion of phase 2 but no further trials or studies/discontinued |
Figure 5Diagram representing the non-oral therapies for Parkinson’s disease for different routes. The therapies are organized in terms of availability: clinically available (green), in development (yellow), and discontinued (orange). SER-214, rotigitine polyoxazoline conjugate; MTD, transdermal route; TriGel, levodopa carbidopa entacapone (liquid form); APL-130277, sublingual apomorphine.