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Gastric emptying is the end-result of a complex and carefully regulated series of events which follow the ingestion of a meal, each of which is dependent on the other and subject to neurohormonal control. Motilin is an endogenous peptide, produced mainly in the duodenum, whose physiological action is mediated by motilin receptors located on enteric neurons, peripheral terminals of the vagus, and on the smooth muscle of the gut. Motilin and non-peptide agonists at motilin receptors increases the gastric emptying rate and therefore provide a potential approach to the treatment of a range of clinical conditions in which delayed gastric emptying is thought to be part of the physiopathology and may be contributory to symptoms. Parkinson's disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by degeneration of nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurones. It affects 1.5% of the global population over 65 years of age. Cardinal symptoms comprise bradykinesia, rigidity, resting tremors and postural instability. Gastrointestinal dysfunction, including gastroparesis, is a frequent feature of PD affecting approximately 90% of patients, and is caused by autonomic dysfunction as well as an adverse effect of antiparkinsonian drug therapy. The therapeutic mainstay for PD treatment is the neutral amino acid L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA), a dopamine prodrug, as it provides the most rapid and effective symptomatic control of motor impairment in PD. The primary determinant of L-DOPA bioavailability is gastric emptying (GE); delays in GE slow delivery of L-DOPA to its proximal small intestinal absorption sites, increasing the extent of presystemic metabolism, and leading to slowed and diminished absorption.
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MOT115816 will be conducted as a multi-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled study to investigate the ability of the motilin receptor agonist GSK962040 to improve L-DOPA pharmacokinetics (PK) by enhancing gastric emptying via motilin receptor agonism. Subjects will be randomized to receive 50 mg GSK962040 or placebo in a 2:1 ratio administered orally once daily for 7-9 days. The study will consist of a screening/baseline period, a treatment period, and a 14-day post treatment safety follow-up visit. During this period participants will be asked to attend the study center for 5 visits 3 of which will last approximately 5 hours. The duration of each patient's participation in the study from screening to follow-up visit will be approximately 7-8 weeks. For three of the visits, subjects will visit the clinical unit fasted and prior to taking their first morning L-DOPA dose. Volunteers will undergo a complete physical (including cardiovascular monitoring (ECG), vital signs, blood samples, and medical history), measurement of plasma L-DOPA levels, completion of patient diary to capture the amount of awake time (in hours) spent "on" without dyskinesias, "on" with troublesome dyskinesias, "on" with non-troublesome dyskinesias, and "off" and gastric symptoms, non-motor and motor symptoms assessments (MDS-UPDRS rating scale and "finger taps") and measurement of gastric emptying rate.
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58 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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