Long-term effects of safinamide adjunct therapy on levodopa-induced dyskinesia in Parkinson’s disease: post-hoc analysis of a Japanese phase III study

This post-hoc analysis investigated the long-term effects of safinamide on the course of dyskinesia and efficacy outcomes using data from a phase III, open-label 52-week study of safinamide 50 or 100 mg/day in Japanese patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) with wearing-off. Patients ( N  = 194) wer...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Neural Transmission 2022-10, Vol.129 (10), p.1277-1287
Hauptverfasser: Hattori, Nobutaka, Kamei, Takanori, Ishida, Takayuki, Suzuki, Ippei, Nomoto, Masahiro, Tsuboi, Yoshio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This post-hoc analysis investigated the long-term effects of safinamide on the course of dyskinesia and efficacy outcomes using data from a phase III, open-label 52-week study of safinamide 50 or 100 mg/day in Japanese patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) with wearing-off. Patients ( N  = 194) were grouped using the UPDRS Part IV item 32: with and without pre-existing dyskinesia (pre-D subgroup; item 32 > 0 at baseline [ n  = 81], without pre-D subgroup; item 32 = 0 at baseline [ n  = 113]). ON-time with troublesome dyskinesia (ON-TD) increased significantly from baseline to Week 4 in the pre-D subgroup (+ 0.25 ± 0.11 h [mean ± SE], p  = 0.0355) but gradually decreased up to Week 52 (change from baseline: − 0.08 ± 0.17 h, p  = 0.6224); ON-TD did not change significantly in the Without pre-D subgroup. UPDRS Part IV item 32 score increased significantly at Week 52 compared with baseline in the Without pre-D subgroup, but no UPDRS Part IV dyskinesia related-domains changed in the pre-D subgroup. Both subgroups improved in ON-time without TD, UPDRS Part III, and Part II [OFF-phase] scores. The cumulative incidence of new or worsening dyskinesia (adverse drug reaction) at Week 52 was 32.5 and 5.0% in the pre-D and Without pre-D subgroups, respectively. This study suggested that safinamide led to short-term increasing dyskinesia but may be not associated with marked dyskinesia at 1-year follow-up in patients with pre-existing dyskinesia, and that it improved motor symptoms regardless of the presence or absence of dyskinesia at baseline. Further studies are warranted to investigate this association in more details. Trial registration: JapicCTI-153057 (Registered: 2015/11/02).
ISSN:0300-9564
1435-1463
DOI:10.1007/s00702-022-02532-2