| Literature DB >> 29988514 |
Zhenxin Zhang1, Ming Shao2, Shengdi Chen3, Chunfeng Liu4, Rong Peng5, Yansheng Li6, Jian Wang7, Suiqiang Zhu8, Qiumin Qu9, Xiaoying Zhang10, Haibo Chen11, Xiangru Sun12, Yanping Wang13, Shenggang Sun14, Baorong Zhang15, Jimei Li16, Xiaoping Pan17, Gang Zhao18.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of adjunct rasagiline in levodopa-treated patients with Parkinson's disease and motor fluctuations is supported by findings from large-scale clinical studies. This study is to investigate the efficacy and safety of adjunct rasagiline in Chinese patients with Parkinson's disease, as a product registration study.Entities:
Keywords: Adjunct; China; Motor fluctuations; OFF time; Parkinson’s disease; Quality of life; Rasagiline
Year: 2018 PMID: 29988514 PMCID: PMC6026338 DOI: 10.1186/s40035-018-0119-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Neurodegener ISSN: 2047-9158 Impact factor: 8.014
Fig. 1Flow of patients through the study.a3 patients did not receive treatment and were excluded from the APTS. b11 patients did not have valid post-baseline diaries and were excluded from the FAS; 2 further patients (in the placebo group) were excluded from the primary efficacy analysis due to having no baseline diaries, but were in the FAS for all non-diary-related endpoints. APRS = all-patients-randomized set; APTS = all-patients-treated set; FAS = full-analysis set (modified intent-to-treat)
Patient demographics and characteristics at baseline (all-patients-treated set)
| Placebo ( | Rasagiline 1 mg/day ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 61.7 (9.9) | 62.7 (8.9) |
| Gender, male | 109 (69%) | 103 (63%) |
| BMI | 23.2 (3.3) | 23.1 (3.2) |
| Education (highest level)a | ||
| Elementary/middle school | 67 (44%) | 68 (43%) |
| High school | 45 (30%) | 41 (26%) |
| College/university/graduate | 33 (22%) | 46 (29%) |
| None/other | 7 (5%) | 3 (2%) |
| Duration of PD, years | 7.1 (4.3) | 7.4 (4.8) |
| Modified Hoehn and Yahr ON | 2.0 (0.7) | 1.9 (0.7) |
| Patients with dyskinesia | 31 (20%) | 49 (30%) |
| UPDRS-Dyskinesia | 0.35 (0.9) | 0.49 (1.2) |
| ON time with troublesome dyskinesia, hours | 0.55 (1.8) | 0.67 (2.0) |
| Patients taking concomitant anti-PD medications:b | ||
| Anticholinergics | 20 (13%) | 21 (13%) |
| Amantadine | 58 (37%) | 50 (31%) |
| Dopamine agonistsc | 102 (65%) | 104 (64%) |
| COMT inhibitorsd | 31 (20%) | 34 (21%) |
|
| (n = 152) | (n = 158) |
| Total daily OFF time, hourse | 6.1 (2.7) | 6.1 (2.6) |
| Total daily ON time, hourse | 9.3 (2.5) | 9.4 (2.4) |
| UPDRS-ADL OFF | 16.5 (7.5) | 15.6 (7.2) |
| UPDRS-ADL ON | 7.3 (5.1) | 6.8 (4.6) |
| UPDRS-Motor ON | 25.6 (10.5) | 23.8 (10.5) |
| CGI-S | 4.1 (0.8) | 3.9 (0.8) |
| Total daily levodopa dose, mg | 550 (224) | 501 (222) |
| Total daily levodopa dose at end of Week 4, mgf | 549 (225) | 495 (219) |
aFAS population (n = 152 for placebo group, n = 158 for rasagiline group)
bmedication that was continued after the first study treatment dose
cbromocriptine, piribedil, pramipexole, pramipexole dihydrochloride; ropinirole hydrochloride
dentacapone
en = 150 for placebo group
fFAS, OC (n = 151 for placebo group, n = 157 for rasagiline group)
Fig. 2Changes from baseline in total daily OFF time. a Primary endpoint: mean change from baseline, averaged over visits at Weeks 4, 8, 12 and 16, in total daily OFF time (full-analysis set, analysis of covariance, observed cases). b Adjusted change from baseline in total daily OFF time (full-analysis set, analysis of covariance, last observation carried forward). SE = standard error
Change from baseline in efficacy endpoints (full-analysis set)
| Adjusted mean change from baseline (SE) | Difference vs placebo (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Placebo ( | Rasagiline 1 mg/day ( | |||
| Primary endpoint (mean change over Weeks 4, 8, 12, and 16; ANCOVA, OC) | ||||
| Total daily OFF time, hoursa | − 0.76 (0.16) | −1.25 (0.16) | −0.50 (− 0.92, − 0.07) | 0.023 |
| Secondary endpoints (Week 16; ANCOVA, LOCF) | ||||
| CGI-Ib | 3.56 (0.07) | 3.15 (0.07) | −0.41 (− 0.61, − 0.22) | < 0.001 |
| UPDRS-ADL OFF | −1.20 (0.28) | − 2.21 (0.28) | − 1.01 (− 1.75, − 0.27) | 0.008 |
| UPDRS-Motor ON | −1.75 (0.55) | − 3.34 (0.55) | − 1.60 (− 3.05, − 0.14) | 0.032 |
| Exploratory analyses (mean change from baseline to Week 16 in total daily OFF time) | ||||
| ANCOVA, OC | −0.87 (0.21) ( | − 1.39 (0.21) ( | − 0.52 (− 1.06, 0.02) | 0.0602 |
| ANCOVA, LOCF | −0.81 (0.20) | − 1.36 (0.20) | −0.55 (− 1.08, − 0.02) | 0.0412 |
| MMRM, OC | −0.81 (0.20) | −1.34 (0.20) | − 0.53 (− 1.07, 0.00) | 0.0514 |
| PDQ-39 summary index and dimension scores (mean change, SE at Week 16; ANCOVA, OC) | ||||
| Summary index | −0.1 (0.8) | −1.9 (0.8) | −1.8 (−3.96, 0.42) | 0.1122 |
| Activities of daily living | 2.0 (1.3) | −4.0 (1.3) | −6.1 (−9.52, − 2.64) | < 0.001 |
| Bodily discomfort | 1.7 (1.4) | − 2.2 (1.4) | −3.9 (− 7.65, − 0.12) | 0.043 |
| Cognition | 0.9 (1.2) | 0.4 (1.2) | −0.6 (−3.77, 2.67) | 0.737 |
| Communication | −1.0 (1.2) | 0.1 (1.2) | 1.1 (−2.09, 4.23) | 0.506 |
| Emotional well-being | −0.6 (1.5) | −3.0 (1.5) | −2.4 (−6.35, 1.49) | 0.224 |
| Mobility | −1.6 (1.2) | −4.1 (1.2) | −2.5 (−5.59, 0.53) | 0.104 |
| Social support | −1.2 (1.1) | 0.4 (1.1) | 1.6 (−1.35, 4.53) | 0.288 |
| Stigma | −2.2 (1.4) | −4.7 (1.4) | −2.5 (−6.22, 1.32) | 0.202 |
| EQ-5D (mean change, SE at Week 16; ANCOVA, OC) | ||||
| Utility index | 0.00 (0.02) | 0.05 (0.02) | 0.05 (0.01, 0.09) | 0.024 |
| Health statec | 0.77 (1.18) | 5.09 (1.20) | 4.31 (1.18, 7.45) | 0.007 |
an = 150 for placebo group
babsolute value at Week 16
cmeasured using visual analogue scale
Frequency of adverse events (all-patients-treated set)
| Number of patients (%) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Placebo ( | Rasagiline 1 mg/day ( | |
| Patients with AEs | 59 (37.3) | 66 (40.5) |
| Patients with AEs leading to withdrawal | 5 (3.2)a | 6 (3.7)b |
| Patients with SAEs | 5 (3.2)c | 7 (4.3)d |
| Most frequent TEAEse (preferred terms; ≥1% in either group): | ||
| Dyskinesia | 12 (7.6) | 11 (6.7) |
| Dizziness | 0 (0.0) | 8 (4.9) |
| Hypotension | 0 (0.0) | 6 (3.7) |
| Parkinson’s diseasef | 7 (4.4) | 5 (3.1) |
| Alanine aminotransferase increased | 1 (0.6) | 3 (1.8) |
| Aspartate aminotransferase increased | 1 (0.6) | 3 (1.8) |
| Nausea | 2 (1.3) | 3 (1.8) |
| Vomiting | 0 (0.0) | 3 (1.8) |
| Fall | 2 (1.3) | 2 (1.2) |
| Hallucination | 0 (0.0) | 2 (1.2) |
| Headache | 0 (0.0) | 2 (1.2) |
| Herpes zoster | 0 (0.0) | 2 (1.2) |
| Insomnia | 0 (0.0) | 2 (1.2) |
| Pain in extremity | 1 (0.6) | 2 (1.2) |
| Rib fracture | 0 (0.0) | 2 (1.2) |
| Diarrhea | 4 (2.5) | 1 (0.6) |
| Abdominal distension | 3 (1.9) | 1 (0.6) |
| Nasopharyngitis | 3 (1.9) | 1 (0.6) |
| Accidental overdose | 3 (1.9) | 0 (0.0) |
| Constipation | 3 (1.9) | 0 (0.0) |
| Fatigue | 2 (1.3) | 1 (0.6) |
| Somnolence | 2 (1.3) | 1 (0.6) |
| Muscle spasms | 2 (1.3) | 0 (0.0) |
| Thrombocytopenia | 2 (1.3) | 0 (0.0) |
| URTI | 2 (1.3) | 0 (0.0) |
| Viral URTI | 2 (1.3) | 0 (0.0) |
aDyskinesia*, femur fracture, intervertebral disc protrusion, Parkinson’s disease*, psoriasis* (all n = 1)
bhallucination* (n = 2), dyskinesia*, epilepsy, hypotension*, transient ischemic attack (all n = 1)
cedema peripheral, erysipelas* + psoriasis*, femur fracture, intervertebral disc protrusion, multiple fractures + road traffic accident (all n = 1
dappendicitis, delusional perception*, Parkinson’s disease*, peripheral nerve injury, sick sinus syndrome, transient ischemic attack, venous stenosis (all n = 1)
ean event that started after the first dose of study treatment and prior to the last protocol-specified contact with that patient
fpatients reported symptom aggravation/disease progression
*Considered by the investigator to be possibly or probably related to treatment