Parkinson's Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Electronic Compliance Monitoring in Parkinson's Disease
Patients with Parkinson's Disease (PD) depend on medication for relief of motor symptoms, and for this reason are often assumed to medicate very carefully. Overall, medication adherence is very good, but a subset of 15 to 20% of cases take less than 80% of the total prescribed dose. However, irregular timing of drug ingestion is almost universal, perhaps contributed by fluctuating symptoms and drug regimen complexity. Pulsatile dopaminergic stimulation in the basal ganglia is implicated in the development and manifestation of motor complications of advancing PD. Irregular medication intake is likely to contribute to peaks and troughs in serum and brain drug levels. In other diseases, patient adherence to prescribed medication improves through simplifying drug regimens, providing additional education, counselling and behavioural approaches and providing reminder packaging. We tested the effect on the timing of medicine ingestion of an educational approach, in which patients were given detailed additional information about the continuous dopaminergic theory.
Patients attending a regional movement disorder clinic with idiopathic PD (by UK Brain Bank
criteria) and prescribed one or more antiparkinson drug (including dopamine agonist or
levodopa) were invited to participate. Patients who were unable to manipulate the electronic
pill monitoring bottles, or whose compliance would be adversely affected by using the
electronic pill monitoring bottles (e.g. those reliant on a compliance aid) were excluded.
The study received ethics approval and signed consent was obtained. During the study
medication was adjusted according to clinical need. The increase in levodopa equivalent
units during the study period was calculated according to established formula[12].
Baseline assessments of unified Parkinson’s disease rating scale (UPDRS), Hoehn and Yahr,
Schwab and England, mini-mental state examination, geriatric depression scale and quality of
life score (PDQ 39) were performed. Clinical scoring was blind to patient group and
performed in an ‘on’ state. The UPDRS 3 and adverse events were recorded at each visit. The
quality of life score (PDQ 39) was repeated at the final visit.
All antiparkinson drugs were monitored during two 3 month periods (before and after the
educational intervention) using electronic monitoring pill bottles (MEMS®, Aardex,
Switzerland), a device which records the time and date of bottle opening.
Patients randomly assigned (computer generated and placed in opaque envelopes) to the active
(counselled) group were given verbal and written information about the continuous
dopaminergic theory, and written advice on optimal medicine timing tailored to their own
drug regimen. The counselling explained that in health, brain dopamine is constant, and that
fluctuations from Parkinson’s medications should be minimised to simulate normal dopamine
levels. Control patients received standard care, but also had medication intake monitored
using the MEMS device.
Timing compliance (the percentage of doses taken at the correct time interval) was
calculated using time intervals which optimise the pharmacokinetic profile, plus a 25%
allowance, eg. 3 times daily medication is satisfactory at between 6 and 10 hours.
Selegiline 5mg twice daily was excluded from analysis as the second dose is taken at
lunchtime to avoid sleep disturbance.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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