| Literature DB >> 35054222 |
Diego Santos García1,2, María Álvarez Sauco3, Matilde Calopa4, Fátima Carrillo5,6, Francisco Escamilla Sevilla7, Eric Freire3,8, Rocío García Ramos9, Jaime Kulisevsky6,10, Juan Carlos Gómez Esteban11, Inés Legarda12, María Rosario Isabel Luquín13, Juan Carlos Martínez Castrillo14, Pablo Martínez-Martin6, Irene Martínez-Torres15, Pablo Mir5,6, Ángel Sesar Ignacio16.
Abstract
Background and objective: Parkinson's disease (PD) is a clinically heterogeneous disorder in which the symptoms and prognosis can be very different among patients. We propose a new simple classification to identify key symptoms and staging in PD. Patients andEntities:
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; cognition; dependency; motor symptoms; non-motor symptoms
Year: 2021 PMID: 35054222 PMCID: PMC8774369 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12010055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
The main points approved by the participating expert neurologists regarding the new PD classification are shown.
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It is considered necessary and of interest to propose a new simple and useful classification by axes of PD. The number of axes should not be excessive (simplification is a prerequisite for usefulness). Each axis must be based on a key aspect of the disease. Each axis can then have different sub-axes. The way to evaluate each axis must be simple so that the classification as a whole can be simple as well. Cognitive problems constitute a key symptom and should be an axis on its own. Loss of independence of autonomy for activities of daily living is a key symptom and should be an axis on its own. Based on the information collected, a PD classification and PD staging could be defined. The data for the classification will be obtained from the direct evaluation of the patient in clinical practice, either through direct interview and assessment by the evaluating neurologist or through the use of clinical scales. The purpose of this classification is to enable a quick visual interpretation of the patient’s condition, both for the neurologist who follows them regularly and for other specialists. The TNM classification used in oncology and the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) in vascular neurology were considered as a model in the design. Based on the classification, a staging will be established. The classification may be used at each clinical visit to monitor the evolution of the patient in terms of symptoms control and disease progression. |
PD, Parkinson’s disease.
Figure 1Flow chart on the phases and objectives of the project. PD, Parkinson’s disease.
Figure 2MNCD PD classification, showing the 4 major axis with their sub-axes and stages from 1 to 5. In Staging, an arrow with the same color as in the upper part indicates that there is a relevant symptomatology regarding the axis. For axes 3 and 4, light color indicates milder symptoms (mild cognitive impairment for axis 3 and dependency for instrumental ADL for axis 4) and dark color for a more severe affectation (dementia for axis 3 and dependency for ADL for axis 4). When the arrow is blue, it indicates that there may or may not be relevant symptoms related to the axis. *, it is considered by itself a single axis (without sub-axes) with excluding options. ADL, activities of daily living.
Examples about the MNCD application.
Stages in PD according to the MNCD classification.
Figure 3Three examples about the use of the MNCD classification are shown in PD patients with very different characteristics and outcomes (age from symptoms onset, phenotype, etc.). Example 1 represents a patient who developed dementia in the long-term; example 2, an elderly woman at symptoms onset who developed dementia and functional dependency in the short-term; example 3, a very young patient with an asymmetric tremor dominant benign form who improved after intervention and remained very stable after several years of evolution. FOG, freezing of gait; PD, Parkinson’s disease.