Calculating clinical progression rates in Parkinson's disease: Methods matter

Abstract Introduction Disease progression in Parkinson's disease is often calculated in data from cross-sectional studies, where a severity score (e.g. UPDRS-motor score) is divided by disease duration. While this intuitively may seem a plausible approach, it is uncertain if these rates are sim...

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Veröffentlicht in:Parkinsonism & related disorders 2014-11, Vol.20 (11), p.1263-1267
Hauptverfasser: Marinus, Johan, van der Heeden, Jorine F, van Hilten, Jacobus J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Introduction Disease progression in Parkinson's disease is often calculated in data from cross-sectional studies, where a severity score (e.g. UPDRS-motor score) is divided by disease duration. While this intuitively may seem a plausible approach, it is uncertain if these rates are similar to those calculated from longitudinal data. The aim of this study is to examine if progression rates calculated according to both methods yield the same results. Methods We calculated two progression rates in data from the PROPARK study: one where last follow-up SPES/SCOPA motor and activities-of-daily-living scores were divided by disease duration, and one in which baseline motor and activities-of-daily-living scores were subtracted from data collected at last follow-up, and where the difference was divided by the time that passed between both assessments. We subsequently calculated the rank order correlation between both approaches. Results We found that progression rates calculated from cross-sectional data are 1.5–2 times higher than those calculated from longitudinal data, and that the correlation between both methods is
ISSN:1353-8020
1873-5126
DOI:10.1016/j.parkreldis.2014.08.009