Thirteen centers participated in a multicenter database with systematic evaluation of US and Canadian patients who had adrenal medullary transplantation for Parkinson's disease. This voluntary registry collected demographic, safety, and efficacy data using the same scoring measures over a 2-year follow-up period. Baseline data on 61 patients and 2-year follow-up data on 56 patients were compared. Eighteen percent died during the study period, and one-half of these deaths were related or questionably related to the surgery. Of the remaining 45 patients with data, global improvement, defined as an improved summed score of the "on" and "off" motor and activities of daily living functions from the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale, occurred in 32% of the patients at 2 years after surgery. At follow-up, significant group improvement persisted in the amount of daily "on" time and the quality of "off" function, but other measures were no better than baseline. When the global improvement calculation was based on the total sample and included deaths and patients lost to follow-up as "not improved," only 19% were improved 2 years after surgery. Twenty-two percent of survivors had persistent psychiatric morbidity not present prior to surgery. These data document a modest group improvement in "off" function after neurotransplantation, but a serious level of mortality and morbidity.
Sixteen patients with advanced Parkinson's disease (PD) and motor fluctuations were evaluated throughout 12 months of open label therapy on CR4-Sinemet. Reduced dosage frequency and significant motor improvement with reduced fluctuation occurred and were maintained with CR4-Sinemet compared with baseline on Sinemet. In a double-blind protocol using CR4-Sinemet in 20 stable PD patients, CR4-Sinemet was given twice daily and compared with Sinemet given four times daily. Patients remained stable without improvement or deterioration when the long-acting drug was substituted at 50% frequency. Plasma levodopa levels with CR4-Sinemet were smoother than with Sinemet. Although some patients receiving CR4-Sinemet found they functioned more slowly in the morning, the easier dosing schedule and improved amount of "on" time in fluctuators suggest that this formulation may become increasingly useful in managing PD.
The long-term effect of L-dopa in 3 patients with progressive supranuclear palsy is described and 10 other cases previously reported are summarized. L-dopa has a significant effect on the parkinsonian features of PSP but does not have any significant effect on the specific non-parkinsonian features such as ophthalmoplegia and neck dystonia. The implications of this difference are discussed in relation to the pathophysiology of the separate symptoms.
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