Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research (Jun 2023)

Treatment Reconciliation in Parkinson’s Disease Patients with Particular Reference to Wearing-off and Motor fluctuations: A Registry-based, Prospective, Observational Study

  • Satyabrata Sahoo,
  • Asutosh Pal,
  • Syed Mohammad Naser,
  • Chiranjib Bagchi,
  • Santanu Munshi,
  • Santanu Kumar Tripathi,
  • Mrinal Acharya,
  • Shambo Samrat Samajdar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7860/JCDR/2023/61854.18099
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 6
pp. FC09 – FC13

Abstract

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Introduction: Parkinson’s Disease (PD) is the second most frequent neurodegenerative disease and dopaminergic agents are frequently used as a treatment while ‘end of dose deterioration’ or ‘Wearing-Off (WO)’ phenomenon is common with these agents. Treatment reconciliation may be helpful in this situation and there is dearth of studies especially in India. Aim: To study the WO effects in patients of PD, their pharmacotherapy and outcome. Materials and Methods: This registry-based, prospective, observational, outcomes-based study was conducted in the Department of Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology, School of Tropical Medicine, Kolkata, West Bengal, India, in collaboration with Department of Neuromedicine of Kolkata Medical College and private clinics of a Neurologist from January 2020 to December 2021. An attempt was also undertaken to make a registry of Idiopathic Parkinson’s Disease (IPD) patients. WO Questionnaire 19-items (WOQ-19), Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS Scale), The 39-items Parkinson’s Disease Questionnaire (PDQ-39 questionnaire), The 8-items Morisky Medication Adherence Scale (MMAS scale), suspected Adverse Drug Reaction (ADR) Reporting Form of Indian Pharmacoepia commission (version 1.3), World Health Organisation- Uppsala Monitoring Centre (WHO-UMC) Scale, Naranjo causality assessment scale, Hartwig and Seigel’s Severity Assessment Scale were used in the present study. The study was commenced after obtaining approval from institutional ethics committee. The data was then analysed with parametric or non parametric tests using (mean±Standard Deviation (SD), median, Fisher’s-exact test, Friedman’s Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) test, Wilcoxon matched pair signed-rank test). Data collected and then statistically analysed by using WPS Excel version 2021 and GraphPad Prism version 9 software. Results: Total IPD patients were found to be 111 in the present study with a mean age of IPD patients as 61.85±7.20 years. Incidence of WO in the present study was found to be 40.5% among IPD patients. Most common characteristic of WO was found to be tremor in 104 (28.8%) patients followed by slowness of movement in 63 (17.5%) patients. WHO-UMC scale and Naranjo causality assesment scale both revealed 36.4% ADRs were probable category and 63.6% were possible category. MDS-UPDRS Score, PDQ-39 Score, MMAS-8 score significantly (p-value<0.05) improved during the course of treatment. Conclusion: Dose adjustment of syndopa was mostly used in the management of WO phenomenon and significant improvement in the quality of life of the patients was seen.

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