| Literature DB >> 34276544 |
Brent Bluett1,2, Alexander Y Pantelyat3, Irene Litvan4, Farwa Ali5, Diana Apetauerova6, Danny Bega7, Lisa Bloom8, James Bower5, Adam L Boxer9, Marian L Dale10, Rohit Dhall11, Antoine Duquette12, Hubert H Fernandez13, Jori E Fleisher14, Murray Grossman15, Michael Howell16, Diana R Kerwin17, Julie Leegwater-Kim6, Christiane Lepage12, Peter Alexander Ljubenkov9, Martina Mancini10, Nikolaus R McFarland18, Paolo Moretti19, Erica Myrick14, Pritika Patel6, Laura S Plummer20, Federico Rodriguez-Porcel21, Julio Rojas9, Christos Sidiropoulos22, Miriam Sklerov23, Leonard L Sokol7, Paul J Tuite16, Lawren VandeVrede24, Jennifer Wilhelm10, Anne-Marie A Wills20, Tao Xie8, Lawrence I Golbe25.
Abstract
Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and corticobasal syndrome (CBS; the most common phenotype of corticobasal degeneration) are tauopathies with a relentless course, usually starting in the mid-60s and leading to death after an average of 7 years. There is as yet no specific or disease-modifying treatment. Clinical deficits in PSP are numerous, involve the entire neuraxis, and present as several discrete phenotypes. They center on rigidity, bradykinesia, postural instability, gait freezing, supranuclear ocular motor impairment, dysarthria, dysphagia, incontinence, sleep disorders, frontal cognitive dysfunction, and a variety of behavioral changes. CBS presents with prominent and usually asymmetric dystonia, apraxia, myoclonus, pyramidal signs, and cortical sensory loss. The symptoms and deficits of PSP and CBS are amenable to a variety of treatment strategies but most physicians, including many neurologists, are reluctant to care for patients with these conditions because of unfamiliarity with their multiplicity of interacting symptoms and deficits. CurePSP, the organization devoted to support, research, and education for PSP and CBS, created its CurePSP Centers of Care network in North America in 2017 to improve patient access to clinical expertise and develop collaborations. The directors of the 25 centers have created this consensus document outlining best practices in the management of PSP and CBS. They formed a writing committee for each of 12 sub-topics. A 4-member Steering Committee collated and edited the contributions. The result was returned to the entire cohort of authors for further comments, which were considered for incorporation by the Steering Committee. The authors hope that this publication will serve as a convenient guide for all clinicians caring for patients with PSP and CBS and that it will improve care for patients with these devastating but manageable disorders.Entities:
Keywords: CurePSP; consensus; corticobasal syndrome; management; palliative; progressive supranuclear palsy; symptomatic; treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 34276544 PMCID: PMC8284317 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.694872
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Management of motor Parkinsonism in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Levodopa trial |
| a. Helpful only when bradykinesia, rigidity or tremor affects daily activities. |
| b. Titrate carbidopa (or equivalent)/levodopa 25/100 over at least 1 month to 900–1,200 mg per day. |
| c. Maintain maximum tolerated dosage for at least 1 month. |
| d. If no benefit, or if adverse effects (including dyskinesias) occur, gradually taper over at least 2 weeks and try to discontinue. |
| 2. Ancillary dopaminergic medications are unnecessary and should generally be avoided |
| a. Avoid “controlled-release” and “extended-release” preparations |
| b. Avoid dopamine receptor agonists |
| c. Avoid monoamine oxidase B inhibitors |
| d. Avoid catecholamine O-methyltransferase inhibitors |
| e. Avoid adenosine A2A receptor antagonists |
| 3. Non-dopaminergics are not recommended and pure anticholinergics should be avoided. |
Management of gait dysfunction in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Pharmacologic therapy |
| a. Amantadine |
| i. Start at 50–100 mg daily and titrate at intervals of at least 2 weeks |
| ii. Do not exceed 100 mg TID. |
| iii. Monitor for psychosis, confusion, and constipation. |
| iv. Inspect for livedo reticularis and reassure patient that it is benign. |
| b. Coenzyme Q-10 |
| i. Modest benefit on average but some patients respond well |
| ii. Use liposomal form (a liquid) at 100 mg TID |
| iii. If no benefit after 2 months, discontinue. |
| 2. Non-pharmacologic therapy |
| a. Physical therapy |
| i. Early intervention recommended |
| ii. Focused on postural stability and gait re-training |
| iii. Balance, eye movement training and visual awareness training may help. |
| b. Exercise |
| i. Aerobic exercise |
| 1. If tolerated and safe |
| 2. Obtain approval from PCP or cardiologist if cardiovascular history is present. |
| ii. Recumbent bicycle is recommended. |
| c. Assistive devices |
| i. Cane should be prescribed with caution |
| 1. Tripping hazard, as patients tend to carry cane hanging from wrist |
| 2. Fails to prevent falls in other directions. |
| ii. Weighted walker |
| iii. Wheelchair |
| iv. A lightweight transport wheelchair is useful when the caregiver cannot lift a standard wheelchair into a car's trunk. |
Management of dystonia in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Pharmacologic therapy |
| a. Baclofen started at 5 mg daily, titrating gradually to no more than 10 mg TID |
| b. Clonazepam starting at 0.25 mg daily, titrating gradually to no more than 3 mg daily |
| c. Trihexyphenidyl not recommended due to central and peripheral anticholinergic side effects |
| d. BoNT injections are the most effective treatment for focal dystonia |
| e. Dystonia and spasticity in CBS may require higher BoNT doses than in other conditions. |
| 2. Non-pharmacologic therapy |
| a. No formal studies demonstrate benefit of physical therapy for dystonia in PSP/CBS. |
| b. Occupational therapy may be beneficial for dystonia in PSP/CBS. |
| (i) Home health assessment |
| (ii) Evaluation for orthoses such as splints/braces |
| (iii) Exercises to optimize upper limb function |
Management of eyelid and visual dysfunction in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Pharmacologic therapy |
| a. BoNT injections recommended for blepharospasm/lid levator inhibition |
| i. EMG guidance not necessary or recommended |
| ii. Pretarsal injections only recommended for refractory cases |
| b. Improve tear volume |
| i. Artificial tears |
| 1. Glycerin |
| 2. Carboxymethylcellulose |
| 3. Polyethylene glycol |
| ii. Preservative-free lubricants |
| 2. Non-pharmacologic therapy |
| a. Eyelid crutches |
| b. Sensory trick eyewear frames |
| c. Prevent conjunctival drying with humidifiers, warm wet compresses, avoiding forced air ventilation, and protective eyewear |
| d. Binocular prisms |
| i. For gaze limitation, not for diplopia |
| ii. Use with caution during ambulation |
| e. Environmental modifications |
| i. Elevate dinner plate |
| ii. Remove loose rugs, low coffee tables, and children's toys from floors |
| iii. Follow dinner fork or finger down to target |
| f. Referral to ophthalmologist or neuro-optometrist for consideration of: |
| i. Measures to reduce inflammation related to drying |
| ii. Improve tear retention |
Management of constipation in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Non-pharmacologic therapy |
| a. Increased physical activity |
| b. Adequate hydration until suppertime to minimize nocturnal trips to void |
| c. Fiber supplementation |
| d. Minimize |
| i. Anticholinergics |
| ii. Amantadine |
| iii. Opiates |
| 2. Pharmacologic therapy |
| a. Stool softener, docusate starting at 100 mg daily titrated weekly to 100 mg TID |
| b. Osmotic laxatives |
| i. Polyethylene glycol |
| ii. Magnesium citrate |
| iii. Lactulose |
| iv. OTC enema preparations of saline or other hyperosmolar salts |
| c. Stimulants for very short-term use |
| i. Bisacodyl |
| ii. Senna |
| d. Prescription medications for refractory cases |
| i. Linaclotide (guanylate cyclase C agonist) |
| ii. Prucalopride (selective 5-HT4 receptor agonist) |
Management of urinary dysfunction in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Pharmacologic therapy for overactive bladder |
| a. Alpha-receptor antagonists |
| i. Terazosin |
| ii. Doxazosin |
| iii. Tamsulosin |
| iv. Alfuzosin |
| v. Silodosin |
| b. 5-alpha reductase inhibitors |
| i. Finasteride |
| ii. Dutasteride |
| c. Beta-3 adrenoceptor agonists |
| i. Mirabegron |
| ii. Vibegron |
| d. Selective M3 anti-muscarinic anticholinergics |
| i. Darifenacin |
| ii. Solifenacin |
| e. Avoid non-selective anti-muscarinic agents due to central anticholinergic side effects |
| i. Avoid oxybutynin |
| ii. Avoid tolterodine |
| iii. Avoid fesoterodine |
| iv. Trospium has limited brain penetration and may be considered |
| f. BoNT injections for refractory overactive bladder |
| 2. Non-pharmacologic therapy |
| a. Alcohol and caffeine avoidance |
| b. Nocturia |
| i. Compression stockings during day |
| ii. Elevate lower limbs in the late afternoon |
| iii. Restrict fluids in the evening |
| iv. Fully empty bladder before bed |
| v. Elevate the head of the bed at night |
| vi Bladder training and pelvic floor exercises |
| c. Condom catheter for men |
| d. Clean intermittent catheterization for refractory urinary voiding dysfunction with residual volume over 100 mL. |
| e. Trans-tibial nerve stimulation |
Management of sleep disturbances in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Pharmacologic therapy for insomnia |
| a. Melatonin (3–18 mg nightly) |
| b. Low dose clonazepam (0.25–1 mg nightly) |
| c. Other benzodiazepines, benzodiazepine receptor agonists |
| i. Zolpidem |
| ii. Eszopiclone |
| iii. OTC sleep aids such as diphenhydramine and others |
| d. Atypical and tricyclic antidepressants should be avoided or used with extreme caution |
| 2. Pharmacologic therapy for excessive daytime somnolence |
| a. Stimulants such as modafinil, armodafinil, or methylphenidate |
| b. Use these at low dosages |
| 3. Pharmacologic therapy for RLS/PLMD |
| a. Iron replacement (ferrous sulfate 325 mg daily with Vitamin C) if serum ferritin <75 mcg/l |
| b. Gabapentin enacarbil |
| c. Pregabalin |
| d. Dopamine agonists |
| i. Pramipexole |
| ii. Ropinirole |
| iii. Rotigotine |
| iv. Cabergoline |
| 4. Pharmacological therapy for REM behavioral disorder |
| a. Melatonin (3–18 mg nightly) |
| b. Low dose clonazepam (0.25–1 mg nightly) |
| c. Gabapentin (100–300 mg nightly) |
| 5. Non-pharmacologic therapy for insomnia |
| a. Circadian alignment |
| b. Sleep hygiene |
| c. Treatment of underlying issues |
| i. Depression |
| ii. Immobility |
| iii. Nocturia |
| 6. Non-pharmacologic therapy for obstructive sleep apnea |
| a. Lateral decubitus positioning during sleep |
| b. Weight loss in the setting of obesity |
| c. Elevating the head of the bed |
| d. Splinting with oral appliances |
| e. Continuous positive airway pressure |
| f. Surgical removal of obstructive tissue |
| g. Activation of tongue protrusion by implantation of a hypoglossal nerve stimulator |
Management of sialorrhea and dysphagia in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Pharmacologic therapy for sialorrhea |
| a. BoNT injections are first line therapy |
| b. Oral glycopyrrolate (monitor for anticholinergic effects) |
| c. Sublingual atropine drops not recommended because of central anticholinergic effects |
| 2. Non-pharmacologic therapy for dysphagia |
| a. Conservative measures |
| i. Postural maneuvers (chin-tuck posture, head turns) |
| ii. Alternating small bites and sips |
| iii. Taking multiple swallows |
| iv. Volitional coughing and throat-clears after swallowing |
| v. Breath-hold or supraglottic swallow |
| vi. As suggested by results of modified barium swallow |
| 1. Thickening liquids to nectar or honey-thick consistency |
| 2. Avoiding dry solids or mixed consistencies |
| b. Early speech language pathology referral |
| c. Tube feedings/percutaneous gastrostomy |
| i. Reserve for severe cases |
| ii. Carefully consider ethical and quality-of-life issues. |
Management of speech impairment in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Dysarthria |
| a. Speech therapy to maximize comprehensibility |
| b. Augmentative and alternative means of communications as disease progresses |
| i. Delayed auditory feedback or pacing boards |
| ii. Alphabet board |
| iii. Text-to-speech system |
| iv. Eye-gaze speech-generating devices |
| v. Eye-gaze speech-generating devices |
| 2. Apraxia of speech |
| a. Intense, repetitive exercises |
| b. Metronome and other pacing methods |
| c. Gesture |
| d. Writing |
| e. Experimental: cerebellar repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation |
| 3. Non-fluent aphasia |
| a. Exercises to improve pace of speech |
| b. Gesture and other non-speech modalities |
| c. Caregiver and family determine topic and tone of conversation |
| d. Experimental: dorsolateral prefrontal cortical transcranial direct current stimulation |
| 4. Palilalia |
| a. Pacing board |
| b. Metronome and other pacing methods |
Management of cognitive impairment in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Pharmacological management |
| a. Cholinesterase inhibitors such as donepezil |
| i. Use only for amnestic deficits |
| ii. Avoid in cases of severe postural instability |
| iii. Discontinue if no observed benefit |
| 2. Non-pharmacological management |
| a. Caregiver and family education |
| b. Maintain a daily routine |
| i. Adapt previous activities to reduced abilities |
| ii. Emphasize enjoyable, rather than therapeutic, activities |
| iii. Minimize distractors |
| iv. Occupational therapy |
| 1. Safety screening |
| a. Medication management |
| b. Financial risk |
| 2. Access to stove, car, firearms |
| c. Compensatory technology |
| 1. Daily planners |
| 2. Mobile devices |
| d. Lifestyle modifications |
| 1. Aerobic exercise |
| 2. Heart-healthy diet |
| 3. Adequate sleep and nutrition |
| 4. Staying cognitively and socially engaged |
Management of behavioral disturbances in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Pharmacologic management |
| a. Apathy: |
| i. Trial of modafinil or methylphenidate |
| b. Impulsivity |
| i. Behavioral approaches difficult because of frontal deficit. |
| ii. Reduce levodopa and other dopaminergic medications |
| iii. Trial of SSRI such as escitalopram or sertraline at standard dosages |
| iv. Mood stabilizers such as valproic acid and lamotrigine |
| v. ADHD drugs such as atomoxetine |
| c. Depression/Mood disorder |
| i Trial of SSRI at standard dosages |
| ii Avoid tricyclic antidepressants due to side effects |
| d. Pseudobulbar affect |
| i. Trial of SSRI at standard dosages |
| ii. Dextromethorphan-quinidine (second-line due to cost) |
| 2. Non-pharmacologic management |
| a. Caregiver/family education emphasizing that deficit is part of disease |
| b. Occupational therapy |
| c. Cognitive behavioral therapy |
| d. Safety screening |
| i. Risk of medication mismanagement, |
| ii. Financial risk |
| iii. Use of a stove |
| iv. Driving |
| v. Exposure to unsecured firearms |
Management of limb apraxia in PSP/CBS.
| 1. Identify and address other factors impairing performance |
| a. Motor deficits |
| b. Cognitive deficits |
| c. Occupational therapy |
| i. Evaluate for environmental changes |
| ii. Simplify tasks to reduce the need for manual dexterity |
| iii. Gestural, direct and explorative training |
| iv. Encourage bimanual or bipedal tasks for asymmetric motor neglect or alien limb |
| v. Mirror therapy |
| vi. Repetitive facilitation exercise and video game-based rehabilitation |
Experimental neuroprotective approaches and clinical trials for PSP/CBS.
| 1. Completed clinical trials (none has shown clinical efficacy) |
| a. PSP |
| i. Riluzole (multiple proposed mechanisms of action) |
| ii. Davunetide (microtubule stabilizer) |
| iii. Tideglusib (GSK-3 beta inhibition to reduce hyperphosphorylation) |
| iv. Monoclonal antibodies directed against N-terminal of tau |
| b. CBS |
| i. Valproate (GSK-3 beta inhibition) |
| ii. Lithium (GSK-3 beta inhibition) |
| iii. TPI-287 (microtubule stabilizer) |
| iv. Young plasma infusions |
| 2. Novel neuroprotective approaches in or near clinical trials |
| a. RT001 (anti-lipid peroxidation agent) |
| b. UCB0107 (anti-tau antibody targeting the microtubule binding domain rather than the N-terminal) |
| c. ASN120290 (O-GlcNAcase inhibitor to inhibit removal of O-linked |
| d. AZP2006 (increases progranulin) |
| e. MP201(mitochondrial uncoupler) |
| f. Tolfenamic acid (NSAID and tau transcription factor Sp1 inhibitor) |
| g. Antisense oligonucleotides (reduce tau production) |