| Literature DB >> 29628907 |
Luca Marsili1,2, Giovanni Rizzo3,4, Carlo Colosimo5.
Abstract
The diagnosis of Parkinson's disease (PD) is based on clinical features and differently to the common opinion that detecting this condition is easy, seminal clinicopathological studies have shown that up one-fourth of patients diagnosed as PD during life has an alternative diagnosis at postmortem. The misdiagnosis is even higher when only the initial diagnosis is considered, since the diagnostic accuracy improves by time, during follow-up visits. Given that the confirmation of the diagnosis of PD can be only obtained through neuropathology, to improve and facilitate the diagnostic-therapeutic workup in PD, a number of criteria and guidelines have been introduced in the last three decades. In the present paper, we will critically re-appraise the main diagnostic criteria proposed for PD, with particular attention to the recently published criteria by the International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society (MDS) task force, underlying their novelty and focusing on the diagnostic issues still open. We also emphasize that the MDS-PD criteria encompass the two main previous sets of diagnostic criteria (United Kingdom PD Society Brain Bank and Gelb's criteria), introducing at the same time new aspects as the use of non-motor symptoms as additional diagnostic features, and the adoption of the concept of prodromal PD, crucial to enroll in clinical trials PD patients in the very early phase of the disease. To better understand the real diffusion of the new MDS-PD diagnostic criteria among neurologists, we have also collected selective opinions of sixteen movement disorder experts from various world regions on their practical approach for the clinical diagnosis of PD. Results from this brief survey showed that, although innovative and complete, the revised diagnostic criteria produced by MDS task force are still scarcely employed among clinicians. We believe that both national and international scientific societies should operate in the future for a broader diffusion of these criteria with specific initiatives, including dedicated events and teaching courses.Entities:
Keywords: James Parkinson; Parkinson’s disease diagnostic criteria; Parkinson’s disease guidelines; preclinical Parkinson’s disease; prodromal Parkinson’s disease
Year: 2018 PMID: 29628907 PMCID: PMC5877503 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Supportive criteria, absolute exclusion criteria, and red flags for the diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease, according to the revised International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society (MDS-PD) diagnostic criteria [Postuma et al. (21)].
| Supportive criteria |
|---|
Clear and dramatic beneficial response to dopaminergic therapy. During initial treatment, patient returned to normal or near-normal level of function. In the absence of clear documentation of initial response a dramatic response can be classified as: marked improvement with dose increases or marked worsening with dose decreases. Mild changes do not qualify. Document this either objectively (>30% in UPDRS III with change in treatment), or subjectively (clearly documented history of marked changes from a reliable patient or caregiver) unequivocal and marked on/off fluctuations, which must have at some point included predictable end-of-dose wearing off Presence of levodopa-induced dyskinesia Rest tremor of a limb, documented on clinical examination (in past, or on current examination) The presence of either olfactory loss or cardiac sympathetic denervation on MIBG scintigraphy |
| Unequivocal cerebellar abnormalities, such as cerebellar gait, limb ataxia, or cerebellar oculomotor abnormalities (e.g., sustained gaze evoked nystagmus, macro square wave jerks, hypermetric saccades) |
| Downward vertical supranuclear gaze palsy or selective slowing of downward vertical saccades |
| Diagnosis of probable behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia or primary progressive aphasia, defined according to consensus criteria within the first 5 years of disease |
| Parkinsonian features restricted to the lower limbs for more than 3 years |
| Treatment with a dopamine receptor blocker or a dopamine-depleting agent in a dose/time-course consistent with drug-induced parkinsonism |
| Absence of observable response to high-dose levodopa despite at least moderate severity of disease |
| Unequivocal cortical sensory loss (graphesthesia, stereognosis with intact primary sensory modalities), clear limb ideomotor apraxia, or progressive aphasia |
| Normal functional neuroimaging of the presynaptic dopaminergic system |
| Documentation of an alternative condition known to produce parkinsonism and plausibly connected to the patient’s symptoms, or, the expert evaluating physician, based on the full diagnostic assessment feels that an alternative syndrome is more likely than PD |
| Rapid progression of gait impairment requiring regular use of wheelchair within 5 years of onset |
| A complete absence of progression of motor symptoms or signs over 5 or more years unless stability is related to treatment |
| Early bulbar dysfunction: severe dysphonia or dysarthria (speech unintelligible most of the time) or severe dysphagia (requiring soft food, NG tube, or gastrostomy) within first 5 years |
| Inspiratory respiratory dysfunction: either diurnal or nocturnal inspiratory stridor or frequent inspiratory sighs |
| Severe autonomic failure in the first 5 years of disease. This can include: orthostatic hypotension—orthostatic decrease of blood pressure within 3 min of standing by at least 30 mmHg systolic or 15 mmHg diastolic, in the absence of dehydration, medication, or other diseases that could plausibly explain autonomic dysfunction, or severe urinary retention or urinary incontinence in the first 5 years of disease (excluding long-standing or small amount stress incontinence in women), that is not simply functional incontinence. In men, urinary retention must not be attributable to prostate disease, and must be associated with erectile dysfunction |
| Recurrent (>1/year) falls because of impaired balance within 3 years of onset |
| Disproportionate anterocollis (dystonic) or contractures of hand or feet within the first 10 years |
| Absence of any of the common non-motor features of disease despite 5 years disease duration. These include sleep dysfunction (sleep-maintenance insomnia, excessive daytime somnolence, symptoms of REM sleep behavior disorder), autonomic dysfunction (constipation, daytime urinary urgency, symptomatic orthostasis), hyposmia, or psychiatric dysfunction (depression, anxiety, or hallucinations) |
| Otherwise-unexplained pyramidal tract signs, defined as pyramidal weakness or clear pathologic hyperreflexia (excluding mild reflex asymmetry and isolated extensor plantar response) |
| Bilateral symmetric parkinsonism. The patient or caregiver reports bilateral symptom onset with no side predominance, and no side predominance is observed on objective examination |
Licensed by Wiley (License number 4167160336642).
Synopsis of the main diagnostic criteria proposed for Parkinson’s disease, in terms of methodology, size, and relative diffusion.
| Reference | Year of publication | Diagnostic features | Size (no. of pages) | Diffusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| James Parkinsona ( | 1817 | Clinical | 66 | +++ |
| Gibb and Leesb ( | 1988 | Clinical | 44 | +++ |
| Calne et al.a ( | 1992 | Clinical | 3 | + |
| Larsen et al.a ( | 1994 | Clinical | 10 | + |
| Gelb et al.a ( | 1999 | Clinical | 7 | ++ |
| EFNS/MDS-ESc ( | 2013 | Clinical and laboratory | 19 | ++ |
| MDSa ( | 2015 | Clinical and laboratory | 9 | +++(?) |
Type of study: .
EFNS/MDS-ES, European Federation of Neurological Societies/Movement Disorders Society-European Section; UKPDSBB, United Kingdom Parkinson’s disease society brain bank clinical diagnostic criteria; MDS, Movement Disorder Society.
Figure 1Schematic representation of the three questions posed to the movement disorder experts during the brief survey.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the senior movement disorder experts’ answers to the three questions of the brief survey. Legend: Y, yes; N, no; NA, not available.