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E ffect of levodopa‐carbidopa intestinal gel on dyskinesia in advanced P arkinson's disease patients
Author(s) -
Antonini Angelo,
Fung Victor S. C.,
Boyd James T.,
Slevin John T.,
Hall Coleen,
Chatamra Krai,
Eaton Susan,
Benesh Janet A.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
movement disorders
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.352
H-Index - 198
eISSN - 1531-8257
pISSN - 0885-3185
DOI - 10.1002/mds.26528
Subject(s) - levodopa , carbidopa , dyskinesia , tolerability , gastroenterology , medicine , parkinson's disease , anesthesia , adverse effect , disease
ABSTRACT Objective The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of levodopa‐carbidopa intestinal gel (carbidopa‐levodopa enteral suspension) in advanced Parkinson's disease patients with troublesome dyskinesia. Methods Post hoc analyses of patient data from a 12‐week, randomized, double‐blind study and a 54‐week open‐label study were performed. Efficacy was assessed in the subgroup of patients defined by ≥1 hour of “on” time with troublesome dyskinesia at baseline as recorded in Parkinson's disease symptom diaries (double blind: n = 11 levodopa‐carbidopa intestinal gel, n = 12 oral levodopa‐carbidopa; open label: n = 144 levodopa‐carbidopa intestinal gel). The changes in “off” time, “on” time with and without troublesome dyskinesia, and the overall safety and tolerability of levodopa‐carbidopa intestinal gel were analyzed. Results Although not significantly different from oral levodopa treatment ( P  > .05) in the double‐blind study, levodopa‐carbidopa intestinal gel treatment resulted in a reduction from baseline in “on” time with troublesome dyskinesia (mean [standard deviation] hours: baseline = 3.1 [1.7], change from baseline to final = −1.8 [1.8], P  = .014), increase in “on” time without troublesome dyskinesia (baseline = 7.4 [2.2], change = 4.4 [3.6], P  = .004), and decrease in “off” time (baseline = 5.5 [1.3], change = −2.7 [2.8], P  = .015). Similar trends were found in the open‐label study. An increase in levodopa‐carbidopa intestinal gel dose was not significantly correlated with increased “on” time with troublesome dyskinesia in either study (double blind: r  = −.073, P  = .842; open label: r  = −0.001, P  = .992). Adverse events were usually mild to moderate in severity and related to the gastrointestinal procedure. Conclusion Our exploratory analyses suggest that optimizing levodopa delivery with levodopa‐carbidopa intestinal gel may reduce troublesome dyskinesia in advanced Parkinson's disease. © 2016 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society

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