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20 patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease, who are planned to undergo intestinal L-Dopa + entacapone (Lecigon®) treatment will be included into this observational single-armed study. These patient will be observed for hyperdopaminergic complications and neuropsychiatric fluctuations postprocedure at 3, 6 and 12 months.
Full description
This study is planned as non-interventional observational single-armed study in patients that are planned to undergo intestinal L-Dopa + entacapone (Lecigon®) treatment as regular treatment choice outside the study protocol and under the accepted regulatory approval and indication criteria (according to German "Fachinformation Lecigon®"). Patients will be observed at the pre-interventional baseline (oral treatment, before treatment initiation with Lecigon®), 3-month, 6-month follow-up, and final 12-month follow-up. As primary interest, the investigator will analyze the contrast of the pre-interventional baseline and 12-month follow-up in terms of the Ardouin Behavioural Scale which evaluates the hyperdopaminergic complications and neuropsychiatric fluctuations in a semi-structured interview. As additional exploratory outcomes, the investigator will study the "Neuropsychiatric fluctuation scale", impulse control disorders with the "QUIP rating scale (QUIP-RS)". Moreover, the investigator will study apathy outcomes using the "Apathy Evaluation Scale" that mainly relates to the dopaminergic off-state. Outcomes of post-interventional apathy are particularly important, since i) they may coincide with hypodopaminergic off-states, and ii) since outcomes of postoperative apathy are a limitation of existing DBS therapy. Avoiding worsening of apathy might be a strength of intestinal L-Dopa therapy in this regard. Further, the investigator will study established measures of motor sensitization/de-sensitization in particular motor fluctuations and dyskinesia (MDS-UPDRS IV) and Unified Dyskinesia Rating Scale (UDysRS). For completeness, the investigator will characterize MDS-UPDRS III motor state in addition.
Since dopaminergic desensitization occurs with considerable delay of rather weeks and months after changing oral to continuous treatment, the investigator expect a reduction of dopaminergic motor and neuropsychiatric complications within the first 6 months from introducing Lecigon® together with a stable course until final 12-month follow-up. The outcomes will be decided as contrast of the pre-interventional baseline (V0) in best oral treatment compared to 12 month follow-up of Lecigon® treatment.
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Inclusion criteria
Written declaration of consent
Age > 18 years and < 80 years
Idiopathic Parkinson's syndrome (according to British Brain Bank criteria), including genetic forms
L-dopa responsive Parkinson's syndrome
Duration of disease > 5 years
The treatment decision for Lecigon® was made as a regular treatment decision according to the established indication criteria outside the study
Motor fluctuations on oral dopaminergic therapy with uncontrolled motor off symptoms
Presence or history of dyskinesia based on available medical records or self-reported history
History of dopaminergic neuropsychiatric therapy complications based on available physician's letters or self-reported history:
Exclusion criteria
Dementia according to ICD-10 criteria; mild cognitive impairment (MCI) according to screening tools such as MoCA or MMSE is not considered an exclusion criterion as long as ICD-10 criteria for dementia are not met regardless of MoCA/MMSE score.
Acute paranoid psychosis or suicidality (however, impulse control disorder or dopamine dysregulation syndrome is not an exclusion criterion; illusions or (pseudo)-hallucinations are also not an exclusion criterion, as long as there is no risk to the patient or others according to clinical judgment; patients may be allowed to participate in the study after remission of the psychosis/suicidality)
Pregnancy
Contraindications to therapy with Lecigon® according the Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC)
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Central trial contact
Daniel T Weiss, MD; Idil Cebi, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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