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Brain Stimulation Eases Parkinson's Symptoms : Patients on implants and medication regimen saw improvements in quality of life, motor function.

Patients with Parkinson's disease who received continuous electrical stimulation to the subthalamic nucleus experienced significantly greater improvements in various measures of quality of life and motor function after 6 months than did patients who received medication alone, Dr. G¨nther Deuschl and colleagues reported.

Results of a new randomized controlled trial from the German Parkinson Study Group of a nonblinded, intention-to-treat population of 78 patient pairs (156 patients) were reported by Dr. Deuschl of Christian Albrechts University in Kiel, Germany, and his colleagues. Patients were recruited from centers in Germany and Austria. One patient in each pair continued to receive an individualized medication regimen alone, while the other received pulsed electrostimulation to the subthalamic nucleus via a surgically implanted device in addition to the medication regimen; stimulation was ongoing and adjusted for each patient (N. Engl. J. Med. 2006;355:896–908).

Primary outcomes were changes in quality of life, as reflected in scores on the Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire (PDQ-39) summary index, and changes in symptom severity after medication withdrawal, as measured by the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale, Part III (UPDRS-III), the investigators reported.

In 50 of the 78 pairs, the patient who had received neurostimulation showed greater improvements in PDQ-39 summary score than the patient treated with medication alone. The mean PDQ-39 summary score went from 41.8 at baseline in the neurostimulation group to 31.8 at 6 months–an improvement of 24%. In the medication-only group, the mean score was 39.6 at baseline and 40.2 after 6 months.

Motor function (level of symptom severity) in each patient was assessed via the UPDRS-III after a 12-hour withdrawal of antiparkinsonian medications at baseline and at 6 months. In 55 pairs, the patient treated with neurostimulation had a better UPDRS-III score than the nonstimulated patient without medication, reported Dr. Deuschl and colleagues. The neurostimulation group's mean score was 48.0 without medication at baseline, improving to 28.3 at 6 months. For the nonstimulation group, the mean score barely changed, going from 46.8 at baseline to 46.0 at 6 months.

A dyskinesia assessment was collected via patient diaries, and different medications and dosages were converted to equivalents for comparison. Also administered were the Schwab and England scale for activities of daily living, the Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale, the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, and the Medical Outcomes Study 36-item Short-Form Health Survey.

Most measures showed significant mean improvements for the neurostimulation group versus slight declines for the medication-only group; the exceptions were nonsignificant, except for medication dosage, which declined for both groups, but far more so in the neurostimulation group (49% vs. 10%, respectively). Notably, the neurostimulation patients saw a 39% improvement in activities of daily living, versus a 5% decline in the medication-only patients. Psychiatric measures did not differ significantly between the two treatment groups.

The investigators reported 13 adverse events–10 in the neurostimulation group and 3 in the medication-only group. Three patients in the neurostimulation group died, one as a result of a hematoma occurring during surgery, one from pneumonia, and one from suicide. A patient in the medication group died after driving during a psychotic episode.

The overall results demonstrate “superior efficacy” of neurostimulation, the investigators concluded, with “significant and clinically meaningful improvement in quality of life … [and] longer periods and better quality of mobility with less dyskinesia. These changes … led to improvement in measurements of activities of daily living, emotional well-being, stigma, and body discomfort.” However, these benefits should “be weighed against the risk of complications related to surgery,” Dr. Deuschl and colleagues cautioned.

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Patients with Parkinson's disease who received continuous electrical stimulation to the subthalamic nucleus experienced significantly greater improvements in various measures of quality of life and motor function after 6 months than did patients who received medication alone, Dr. G¨nther Deuschl and colleagues reported.

Results of a new randomized controlled trial from the German Parkinson Study Group of a nonblinded, intention-to-treat population of 78 patient pairs (156 patients) were reported by Dr. Deuschl of Christian Albrechts University in Kiel, Germany, and his colleagues. Patients were recruited from centers in Germany and Austria. One patient in each pair continued to receive an individualized medication regimen alone, while the other received pulsed electrostimulation to the subthalamic nucleus via a surgically implanted device in addition to the medication regimen; stimulation was ongoing and adjusted for each patient (N. Engl. J. Med. 2006;355:896–908).

Primary outcomes were changes in quality of life, as reflected in scores on the Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire (PDQ-39) summary index, and changes in symptom severity after medication withdrawal, as measured by the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale, Part III (UPDRS-III), the investigators reported.

In 50 of the 78 pairs, the patient who had received neurostimulation showed greater improvements in PDQ-39 summary score than the patient treated with medication alone. The mean PDQ-39 summary score went from 41.8 at baseline in the neurostimulation group to 31.8 at 6 months–an improvement of 24%. In the medication-only group, the mean score was 39.6 at baseline and 40.2 after 6 months.

Motor function (level of symptom severity) in each patient was assessed via the UPDRS-III after a 12-hour withdrawal of antiparkinsonian medications at baseline and at 6 months. In 55 pairs, the patient treated with neurostimulation had a better UPDRS-III score than the nonstimulated patient without medication, reported Dr. Deuschl and colleagues. The neurostimulation group's mean score was 48.0 without medication at baseline, improving to 28.3 at 6 months. For the nonstimulation group, the mean score barely changed, going from 46.8 at baseline to 46.0 at 6 months.

A dyskinesia assessment was collected via patient diaries, and different medications and dosages were converted to equivalents for comparison. Also administered were the Schwab and England scale for activities of daily living, the Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale, the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, and the Medical Outcomes Study 36-item Short-Form Health Survey.

Most measures showed significant mean improvements for the neurostimulation group versus slight declines for the medication-only group; the exceptions were nonsignificant, except for medication dosage, which declined for both groups, but far more so in the neurostimulation group (49% vs. 10%, respectively). Notably, the neurostimulation patients saw a 39% improvement in activities of daily living, versus a 5% decline in the medication-only patients. Psychiatric measures did not differ significantly between the two treatment groups.

The investigators reported 13 adverse events–10 in the neurostimulation group and 3 in the medication-only group. Three patients in the neurostimulation group died, one as a result of a hematoma occurring during surgery, one from pneumonia, and one from suicide. A patient in the medication group died after driving during a psychotic episode.

The overall results demonstrate “superior efficacy” of neurostimulation, the investigators concluded, with “significant and clinically meaningful improvement in quality of life … [and] longer periods and better quality of mobility with less dyskinesia. These changes … led to improvement in measurements of activities of daily living, emotional well-being, stigma, and body discomfort.” However, these benefits should “be weighed against the risk of complications related to surgery,” Dr. Deuschl and colleagues cautioned.

ELSEVIER GLOBAL MEDICAL NEWS

Patients with Parkinson's disease who received continuous electrical stimulation to the subthalamic nucleus experienced significantly greater improvements in various measures of quality of life and motor function after 6 months than did patients who received medication alone, Dr. G¨nther Deuschl and colleagues reported.

Results of a new randomized controlled trial from the German Parkinson Study Group of a nonblinded, intention-to-treat population of 78 patient pairs (156 patients) were reported by Dr. Deuschl of Christian Albrechts University in Kiel, Germany, and his colleagues. Patients were recruited from centers in Germany and Austria. One patient in each pair continued to receive an individualized medication regimen alone, while the other received pulsed electrostimulation to the subthalamic nucleus via a surgically implanted device in addition to the medication regimen; stimulation was ongoing and adjusted for each patient (N. Engl. J. Med. 2006;355:896–908).

Primary outcomes were changes in quality of life, as reflected in scores on the Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire (PDQ-39) summary index, and changes in symptom severity after medication withdrawal, as measured by the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale, Part III (UPDRS-III), the investigators reported.

In 50 of the 78 pairs, the patient who had received neurostimulation showed greater improvements in PDQ-39 summary score than the patient treated with medication alone. The mean PDQ-39 summary score went from 41.8 at baseline in the neurostimulation group to 31.8 at 6 months–an improvement of 24%. In the medication-only group, the mean score was 39.6 at baseline and 40.2 after 6 months.

Motor function (level of symptom severity) in each patient was assessed via the UPDRS-III after a 12-hour withdrawal of antiparkinsonian medications at baseline and at 6 months. In 55 pairs, the patient treated with neurostimulation had a better UPDRS-III score than the nonstimulated patient without medication, reported Dr. Deuschl and colleagues. The neurostimulation group's mean score was 48.0 without medication at baseline, improving to 28.3 at 6 months. For the nonstimulation group, the mean score barely changed, going from 46.8 at baseline to 46.0 at 6 months.

A dyskinesia assessment was collected via patient diaries, and different medications and dosages were converted to equivalents for comparison. Also administered were the Schwab and England scale for activities of daily living, the Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale, the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, and the Medical Outcomes Study 36-item Short-Form Health Survey.

Most measures showed significant mean improvements for the neurostimulation group versus slight declines for the medication-only group; the exceptions were nonsignificant, except for medication dosage, which declined for both groups, but far more so in the neurostimulation group (49% vs. 10%, respectively). Notably, the neurostimulation patients saw a 39% improvement in activities of daily living, versus a 5% decline in the medication-only patients. Psychiatric measures did not differ significantly between the two treatment groups.

The investigators reported 13 adverse events–10 in the neurostimulation group and 3 in the medication-only group. Three patients in the neurostimulation group died, one as a result of a hematoma occurring during surgery, one from pneumonia, and one from suicide. A patient in the medication group died after driving during a psychotic episode.

The overall results demonstrate “superior efficacy” of neurostimulation, the investigators concluded, with “significant and clinically meaningful improvement in quality of life … [and] longer periods and better quality of mobility with less dyskinesia. These changes … led to improvement in measurements of activities of daily living, emotional well-being, stigma, and body discomfort.” However, these benefits should “be weighed against the risk of complications related to surgery,” Dr. Deuschl and colleagues cautioned.

ELSEVIER GLOBAL MEDICAL NEWS

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Brain Stimulation Eases Parkinson's Symptoms : Patients on implants and medication regimen saw improvements in quality of life, motor function.
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