Haiyan Zhou1, Shuhua Li2,3, Hongmei Yu4, Shenggang Sun5, Xinhua Wan6, Xiaodong Zhu7, Chun-Feng Liu8, Ling Chen9, Wei Xiang10, Yaqing Sun10, Haibo Chen2,3, Shengdi Chen1. 1. Department of Neurology, Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China. 2. Department of Neurology, Beijing Hospital, National Center of Gerontology, Beijing, China. 3. Department of Neurology, Institute of Geriatric Medicine, Chinese Academy of Medical Science, Beijing, China. 4. Department of Neurology, The First Hospital of China Medical University, Shenyang, China. 5. Department of Neurology, Wuhan Union Hospital, Wuhan, China. 6. Department of Neurology, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Beijing, China. 7. Department of Neurology, Tianjin Medical University General Hospital, Tianjin, China. 8. Department of Neurology and Suzhou Clinical Research Center of Neurological Disease, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University, Suzhou, China. 9. Department of Neurology, The First Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yet-Sen University, Guangzhou, China. 10. Boehringer Ingelheim (China), Shanghai, China.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To explore the efficacy and safety of pramipexole sustained release (SR) versus pramipexole immediate release (IR) in treating nocturnal symptoms in levodopa-treated Chinese patients with advanced Parkinson's disease (PD) and sleep disturbances. METHOD: SUSTAIN was an open-label, randomised, active-controlled parallel group exploratory pilot study (NCT03521635). A total of 98 patients were randomly allocated (1 : 1) to either pramipexole SR (n = 49) or pramipexole IR (n = 49) groups. The primary endpoint was a change from baseline in PD Sleep Scale 2nd version (PDSS-2) total score at 18 weeks. A reduction in score represents improvement. Secondary endpoints included Nocturnal Hypokinesia Questionnaire, Scales for Outcomes in PD Sleep Scale, Early Morning Off (EMO), Epworth Sleepiness Scale, PD Questionnaire-8, and responder rates as measured by PDSS-2 total score (<18), EMO scores (≥1 point change), Clinical Global Impression Improvement scale, and Patient Global Impression-Improvement scale. Other endpoints included motor complications (MDS-UPDRS part IV) score. Adverse events were evaluated for each group. RESULTS: The mean pramipexole dose for both groups was 1.5 mg/day at week 18, and the mean changes in PDSS-2 total score for pramipexole SR and IR were -13.7 (95% CI -16.0 to -11.4) and -14.4 (-16.8 to -12.0) (difference of 0.7; p=0.688). Change from baseline for both groups achieved the minimal clinical important difference threshold (MCID = -3.44). No significant difference was observed in change from baseline for other measures of sleep-related disturbances or responder rates. For motor complications, a greater improvement in MDS-UPDRS part IV score was observed in pramipexole SR over IR (-3.4 vs -2.3; treatment group difference: -1.1; p=0.036). Both groups had comparable safety profiles. CONCLUSION: In Chinese patients with advanced PD and sleep disturbances, pramipexole SR and IR have similar benefits in the treatment of nocturnal symptoms and safety, and an improvement from baseline in nocturnal symptoms was observed regardless of pramipexole formulation.
OBJECTIVE: To explore the efficacy and safety of pramipexole sustained release (SR) versus pramipexole immediate release (IR) in treating nocturnal symptoms in levodopa-treated Chinese patients with advanced Parkinson's disease (PD) and sleep disturbances. METHOD: SUSTAIN was an open-label, randomised, active-controlled parallel group exploratory pilot study (NCT03521635). A total of 98 patients were randomly allocated (1 : 1) to either pramipexole SR (n = 49) or pramipexole IR (n = 49) groups. The primary endpoint was a change from baseline in PD Sleep Scale 2nd version (PDSS-2) total score at 18 weeks. A reduction in score represents improvement. Secondary endpoints included Nocturnal Hypokinesia Questionnaire, Scales for Outcomes in PD Sleep Scale, Early Morning Off (EMO), Epworth Sleepiness Scale, PD Questionnaire-8, and responder rates as measured by PDSS-2 total score (<18), EMO scores (≥1 point change), Clinical Global Impression Improvement scale, and Patient Global Impression-Improvement scale. Other endpoints included motor complications (MDS-UPDRS part IV) score. Adverse events were evaluated for each group. RESULTS: The mean pramipexole dose for both groups was 1.5 mg/day at week 18, and the mean changes in PDSS-2 total score for pramipexole SR and IR were -13.7 (95% CI -16.0 to -11.4) and -14.4 (-16.8 to -12.0) (difference of 0.7; p=0.688). Change from baseline for both groups achieved the minimal clinical important difference threshold (MCID = -3.44). No significant difference was observed in change from baseline for other measures of sleep-related disturbances or responder rates. For motor complications, a greater improvement in MDS-UPDRS part IV score was observed in pramipexole SR over IR (-3.4 vs -2.3; treatment group difference: -1.1; p=0.036). Both groups had comparable safety profiles. CONCLUSION: In Chinese patients with advanced PD and sleep disturbances, pramipexole SR and IR have similar benefits in the treatment of nocturnal symptoms and safety, and an improvement from baseline in nocturnal symptoms was observed regardless of pramipexole formulation.
Authors: Ye Zhang; Rong Ren; Larry D Sanford; Linghui Yang; Junying Zhou; Lu Tan; Taomei Li; Jihui Zhang; Yun-Kwok Wing; Jie Shi; Lin Lu; Xiangdong Tang Journal: Sleep Med Rev Date: 2020-02-11 Impact factor: 11.609
Authors: Attila Makkos; Márton Kovács; Dávid Pintér; József Janszky; Norbert Kovács Journal: Parkinsonism Relat Disord Date: 2018-08-26 Impact factor: 4.891