| Literature DB >> 35192177 |
Rajesh Pahwa1, Jason Aldred2, Niodita Gupta3, Emi Terasawa4, Viviana Garcia-Horton4, David R Steffen4, Prasanna L Kandukuri3, Vivek S Chaudhari3, Yash J Jalundhwala3, Yanjun Bao3, Pavnit Kukreja3, Stuart H Isaacson5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: A clinical trial in advanced Parkinson's disease (APD) has established the superiority of carbidopa/levodopa enteral suspension (CLES) in reducing total patient "off" time (OFF) and increasing total "on" time without troublesome dyskinesia (ON-woTD) over orally administered immediate-release carbidopa/levodopa tablets (IR-CL). However, temporal patterns of these improvements throughout the waking day have not been examined. In this analysis, time to ON-woTD after waking and patterns of motor-symptom control throughout the waking day were compared between CLES and IR-CL.Entities:
Keywords: Carbidopa/levodopa; Carbidopa/levodopa enteral suspension; Carbidopa/levodopa intestinal gel; Duodopa; Duopa; Dyskinesia; Parkinson’s disease
Year: 2022 PMID: 35192177 PMCID: PMC9095782 DOI: 10.1007/s40120-022-00332-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Ther ISSN: 2193-6536
Fig. 1Percentage of patient days achieving “on” time without troublesome dyskinesia (ON-woTD) after waking
Fig. 2a Change in “off” time (OFF) from baseline to week 12 by time of the day. b Percentage of patient days with “off” time (OFF) at week 12. c Change in “on” time without troublesome dyskinesia (ON-woTD) from baseline to week 12 by time of the day. d Percentage of patient days having “on” time without troublesome dyskinesia (ON-woTD) at week 12
Fig. 3Individual patient diary plots
Fig. 4Average number of transitions between health states during the waking day at baseline vs. week 12. Baseline vs. week 12 for a CLES and b IR–CL
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| Carbidopa/levodopa enteral suspension (CLES) has demonstrated superiority to immediate-release carbidopa/levodopa tablets (IR–CL) in reducing OFF time and increasing “on” time without troublesome dyskinesia (ON-woTD) in patients with advanced Parkinson’s disease, but the temporal patterns and consistency of these improvements throughout a waking day have not been examined. |
| This post hoc analysis compared patterns of motor-symptom control during the day, time to ON-woTD after waking, and occurrence of extreme motor-state fluctuations between CLES and IR–CL at week 12 of a randomized controlled trial. |
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| CLES-treated patients experienced a more rapid onset of ON-woTD after waking, greater consistency of motor-symptom control, and fewer patients had extreme motor-state fluctuations throughout their waking day than IR–CL-treated patients. |
| These findings suggest that CLES provides more consistent symptom control and more predictable benefit throughout the day for patients with advanced Parkinson’s disease than IR–CL. |