68 research outputs found
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Sensory Tricks Are Associated with Higher Sleep-Related Quality of Life in Cervical Dystonia
Background: Sensory tricks are compensatory gestures that cervical dystonia (CD) patients use to reduce abnormal neck posture and movements. Although sensory tricks are common in CD, little is known about whether trick efficacy changes over time or has effect on quality of life.
Methods: We analyzed clinical data and video recordings from 188 patients with isolated CD. We calculated the duration of CD and assessed the Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scales and the Cervical Dystonia Impact Profile (CDIP-58).
Results: A longer duration of CD corresponded to a less effective sensory trick (r(187) = 0.1901, p = 0.009). Patients who demonstrated more effective sensory tricks reported higher sleep-related quality of life than patients with less effective sensory tricks (r(187) = 0.1680, p = 0.0212). There were no significant relationships between the effectiveness of a sensory trick and the other aspects of quality of life as measured by the CDIP-58.
Discussion: Patients who have had CD longer had less effective sensory tricks consistent with patients’ verbal reports of previously having a trick that no longer works. Patients should be apprised of a wide variety of sensory tricks because their previous tricks may lose efficacy over time and because more effective tricks are associated with higher sleep-related quality of life
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Efficacy and Safety of IncobotulinumtoxinA in Subjects Previously Treated with Botulinum Toxin versus Toxin-Naïve Subjects with Cervical Dystonia
Background: To determine whether botulinum toxin treatment history affected the outcomes of a study comparing the safety and efficacy of incobotulinumtoxinA with placebo in subjects with cervical dystonia (CD). Methods: This was a prospective, double‐blind, randomized, placebo‐controlled, multicenter trial in botulinum toxin‐treated or toxin‐naïve CD subjects. Subjects received a fixed dose of either 120 U or 240 U of incobotulinumtoxinA or placebo. The primary outcome measure was change from baseline to Week 4 in the Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scale (TWSTRS) total score. Treatment‐emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were also evaluated. This report represents a subgroup analysis of botulinum toxin‐treated or toxin‐naïve subjects. Results: Participants (N = 233; 38.6% toxin‐naïve) had a mean age of 52.8 years. IncobotulinumtoxinA significantly improved TWSTRS total scores from baseline to Week 4 in both dose groups versus placebo, and the improvement persisted through the end of the study (≤20 weeks). Both the previously toxin‐treated and toxin‐naïve subjects demonstrated significant improvements in TWSTRS total scores at Week 4 compared to baseline. The most frequent TEAEs in the incobotulinumtoxinA groups were dysphagia, neck pain, and muscular weakness, which were generally mild. TEAEs were more common in the 240 U group and toxin‐naïve subjects. Discussion: Overall, incobotulinumtoxinA was safe and effective in CD, regardless of toxin therapy history. A lower starting dose may be better tolerated among toxin‐naïve subjects without sacrificing efficacy
Postural directionality and head tremor in cervical dystonia
Background: Although abnormal head and neck postures are defining features of cervical dystonia (CD), head tremor (HT) is also common. However, little is known about the relationship between abnormal postures and HT in CD.
Methods: We analyzed clinical data and video recordings from 185 patients enrolled by the Dystonia Coalition. We calculated the likelihood of their HT and HT type ( regular vs. jerky ) given directionality of abnormal head postures, disease duration, sex, and age.
Results: Patients with retrocollis were more likely to have HT than patients with anterocollis (X
Discussion: We found that HT is more likely for CD patients with a specific directionality in their predominant posture. Our finding that CD patients with longer disease duration have a higher likelihood of HT also raises the question of whether HT becomes more likely over time in individual patients
Non-motor phenotypic subgroups in adult-onset idiopathic, isolated, focal cervical dystonia
Background: Non-motor symptoms are well established phenotypic components of adult-onset idiopathic, isolated, focal cervical dystonia (AOIFCD). However, improved understanding of their clinical heterogeneity is needed to better target therapeutic intervention. Here, we examine non-motor phenotypic features to identify possible AOIFCD subgroups.
Methods: Participants diagnosed with AOIFCD were recruited via specialist neurology clinics (dystonia wales: n = 114, dystonia coalition: n = 183). Non-motor assessment included psychiatric symptoms, pain, sleep disturbance, and quality of life, assessed using self-completed questionnaires or face-to-face assessment. Both cohorts were analyzed independently using Cluster, and Bayesian multiple mixed model phenotype analyses to investigate the relationship between non-motor symptoms and determine evidence of phenotypic subgroups.
Results: Independent cluster analysis of the two cohorts suggests two predominant phenotypic subgroups, one consisting of approximately a third of participants in both cohorts, experiencing increased levels of depression, anxiety, sleep impairment, and pain catastrophizing, as well as, decreased quality of life. The Bayesian approach reinforced this with the primary axis, which explained the majority of the variance, in each cohort being associated with psychiatric symptomology, and also sleep impairment and pain catastrophizing in the Dystonia Wales cohort.
Conclusions: Non-motor symptoms accompanying AOIFCD parse into two predominant phenotypic sub-groups, with differences in psychiatric symptoms, pain catastrophizing, sleep quality, and quality of life. Improved understanding of these symptom groups will enable better targeted pathophysiological investigation and future therapeutic intervention
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Motor phenotype of LRRK2 G2019S carriers in early-onset Parkinson disease
Objective: To determine the motor phenotype of LRRK2 G2019S mutation carriers. LRRK2 mutation carriers were previously reported to manifest the tremor dominant motor phenotype, which has been associated with slower motor progression and less cognitive impairment compared with the postural instability and gait difficulty (PIGD) phenotype. Design: Cross-sectional observational study. Setting: Thirteen movement disorders centers. Participants: Nine hundred twenty-five early-onset Parkinson disease cases defined as age at onset younger than 51 years. Main Outcome Measures: LRRK2 mutation status and Parkinson disease motor phenotype: tremor dominant or PIGD. Demographic information, family history of Parkinson disease, and the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale score were collected on all participants. DNA samples were genotyped for LRRK2 mutations (G2019S, I2020T, R1441C, and Y1699C). Logistic regression was used to examine associations of G2019S mutation status with motor phenotype adjusting for disease duration, Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry, levodopa dose, and family history of Parkinson disease. Results: Thirty-four cases (3.7%) (14 previously reported) were G2019S carriers. No other mutations were found. Carriers were more likely to be Ashkenazi Jewish (55.9% vs 11.9%; P < .001) but did not significantly differ in any other demographic or disease characteristics. Carriers had a lower tremor score (P = .03) and were more likely to have a PIGD phenotype (92.3% vs 58.9%; P = .003). The association of the G2019S mutation with PIGD phenotype remained after controlling for disease duration and Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry (odds ratio, 17.7; P < .001). Conclusion: Early-onset Parkinson disease G2019S LRRK2 carriers are more likely to manifest the PIGD phenotype, which may have implications for disease course
When brawn benefits brain: physical activity and Parkinson’s disease risk
This scientific commentary refers to ‘Physical activity and risk of Parkinson's disease in the Swedish National March Cohort’ by Yang et al. (doi:10.1093/brain/awu323)
On demand therapy for Parkinson\u27s disease patients: Opportunities and choices
Levodopa is the most effective symptomatic treatment for Parkinson\u27s disease (PD), but a major treatment challenge is that over time, many patients experience periods of return of PD symptoms intermittently through the day, known as OFF periods. OFF periods typically manifest as a return of motor symptoms but can also involve non-motor symptoms and these periods can disrupt good control despite optimization of the oral levodopa regimen. OFF periods emerge in large measure due to a shortening of the duration of clinical benefit from oral levodopa, thought to be related to a progressive loss of dopamine neurons and their ability to store and release levodopa-derived dopamine over many hours. The problem is further compounded by impaired absorption of oral levodopa due to gastroparesis and other factors limiting its uptake in the small intestine, including competition for uptake by meals and their protein content. On-demand therapies are now available for the treatment of OFF episodes in PD and are administered intermittently, on an as-needed basis, on top of the patient\u27s maintenance medication regimen. To be useful, an on-demand medication should take effect more rapidly and reliably than oral levodopa. Options for on-demand therapy for OFF periods have recently increased with the approval of levodopa inhalation powder and sublingual apomorphine as alternatives to the older option of subcutaneous apomorphine injection, each of which avoids the gastrointestinal tract and its potential for absorption delay. On-demand therapy is now available for patients experiencing episodic or intermittent need for rapid and reliable onset of benefit. On-demand therapy may also provide an alternative to more invasive treatment such as infusion of levodopa/carbidopa intestinal gel and for patients whose OFF episodes are not controlled despite deep brain stimulation
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140 Effects of Long-Term Valbenazine on Tardive Dyskinesia in KINECT 4: Post Hoc Response and Shift Analyses
Valbenazine (VBZ) is a highly selective vesicular monoamine transporter 2 (VMAT2) inhibitor approved for the treatment of tardive dyskinesia (TD), a persistent and potentially disabling movement disorder associated with prolonged antipsychotic exposure. Post hoc response and shift analyses were conducted using Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) data from KINECT 4 (NCT02405091), a long-term open-label study in which participants received up to 48 weeks of open-label treatment with once-daily VBZ (40 or 80 mg).
KINECT 4 included participants who met the following criteria: ages 18 to 85 years; DSM-IV diagnosis of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or mood disorder; neuroleptic-induced TD for ≥3 months prior to screening; stable psychiatric status (Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale score <50); no high risk of active suicidal ideation or behavior. Stable doses of concomitant medications to treat psychiatric and medical disorders were allowed. VBZ dosing was initiated at 40 mg, with escalation to 80 mg at Week 4 based on clinical assessment of TD and tolerability; a dose reduction to 40 mg was allowed if 80 mg was not tolerated. AIMS responses, ranging from ≥10% to 100% improvement from baseline in AIMS total score (sum of items 1-7), were analyzed at Week 48 based on scoring by site investigators. AIMS shift, conducted for each item (representing 7 different body regions), was defined as an improvement from a score ≥3 (moderate/severe) at baseline to a score ≤2 (none/minimal/mild) at Week 48.
103 participants had an available AIMS assessment at Week 48 (40 mg, n=20; 80 mg, n=83 [including 9 with a dose reduction]). At Week 48, 94.2% of participants had ≥30% total AIMS score improvement (40 mg, 90.0%; 80 mg, 95.2%) and 86.4% had ≥50% improvement (40 mg, 90.0%; 80 mg, 85.5%). The percentage of participants meeting the remaining AIMS response thresholds ranged from 9.7% (for 100% response) to 97.1% (for ≥10% response). In participants who had an AIMS item score ≥3 at baseline, shifts to a score ≤2 at Week 48 were as follows: 100% for lips, upper extremities, and lower extremities (VBZ 40 mg and 80 mg). Shift rates for the remaining regions were as follows (40 mg, 80 mg): face (100% [9/9], 96.9% [31/32]), jaw (100% [10/10], 97.6% [40/41]), tongue (100% [11/11], 97.9% [47/48]), trunk (87.5% [7/8], 88.9% [16/18]).
After 48 weeks of treatment with once-daily VBZ (40 or 80 mg), >85% of KINECT 4 participants had a clinically meaningful AIMS response (≥30% total score improvement), a robust AIMS response (≥50% total score improvement), or an AIMS shift (from item score ≥3 at baseline to score ≤2 at Week 48). These results suggest that VBZ is an appropriate long-term treatment for many adults with TD.
This study was sponsored by Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc
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