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Long-term effectiveness of dopamine agonists and monoamine oxidase B inhibitors compared with levodopa as initial treatment for Parkinson's disease (PD MED): a large, open-label, pragmatic randomised trial

Daniels, Jane; Gray, Richard; Ives, Natalie; Rick, Caroline; Patel, Smitaa; Gray, Alastair; Jenkinson, Crispin; Mcintosh, Emma; Wheatley, Keith; Williams, Adrian; Clarke, Carl

Authors

Richard Gray

Natalie Ives

Smitaa Patel

Alastair Gray

Crispin Jenkinson

Emma Mcintosh

Keith Wheatley

Adrian Williams

Carl Clarke



Abstract

Background
Whether initial treatment for Parkinson's disease should consist of levodopa, dopamine agonists, or monoamine oxidase type B inhibitors (MAOBI) is uncertain. We aimed to establish which of these three classes of drug, as initial treatment, provides the most effective long-term control of symptoms and best quality of life for people with early Parkinson's disease.

Methods
In this pragmatic, open-label randomised trial, patients newly diagnosed with Parkinson's disease were randomly assigned (by telephone call to a central office; 1:1:1) between levodopa-sparing therapy (dopamine agonists or MAOBI) and levodopa alone. Patients and investigators were not masked to group assignment. Primary outcomes were the mobility dimension on the 39-item patient-rated Parkinson's disease questionnaire (PDQ-39) quality-of-life scale (range 0–100 with six points defined as the minimally important difference) and cost-effectiveness. Analysis was intention to treat. This trial is registered, number ISRCTN69812316.

Findings
Between Nov 9, 2000, and Dec 22, 2009, 1620 patients were assigned to study groups (528 to levodopa, 632 to dopamine agonist, 460 to MAOBI). With 3-year median follow-up, PDQ-39 mobility scores averaged 1·8 points (95% CI 0·5–3·0, p=0·005) better in patients randomly assigned to levodopa than those assigned to levodopa-sparing therapy, with no increase or attrition of benefit during 7 years' observation. PDQ-39 mobility scores were 1·4 points (95% CI 0·0–2·9, p=0·05) better in patients allocated MAOBI than in those allocated dopamine agonists. EQ-5D utility scores averaged 0·03 (95% CI 0·01–0·05; p=0·0002) better with levodopa than with levodopa-sparing therapy; rates of dementia (hazard ratio [HR] 0·81, 95% CI 0·61–1·08, p=0·14), admissions to institutions (0·86, 0·63–1·18; p=0·4), and death (0·85, 0·69–1·06, p=0·17) were not significantly different, but the upper CIs precluded any substantial increase with levodopa compared with levodopa-sparing therapy. 179 (28%) of 632 patients allocated dopamine agonists and 104 (23%) of 460 patients allocated MAOBI discontinued allocated treatment because of side-effects compared with 11 (2%) of 528 patients allocated levodopa (p less than 0·0001).

Interpretation
Very small but persistent benefits are shown for patient-rated mobility scores when treatment is initiated with levodopa compared with levodopa-sparing therapy. MAOBI as initial levodopa-sparing therapy was at least as effective as dopamine agonists.

Citation

Daniels, J., Gray, R., Ives, N., Rick, C., Patel, S., Gray, A., Jenkinson, C., Mcintosh, E., Wheatley, K., Williams, A., & Clarke, C. (2014). Long-term effectiveness of dopamine agonists and monoamine oxidase B inhibitors compared with levodopa as initial treatment for Parkinson's disease (PD MED): a large, open-label, pragmatic randomised trial. Lancet, 384(9949), 1196-1205. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736%2814%2960683-8

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 11, 2014
Online Publication Date Jun 11, 2014
Publication Date Jun 11, 2014
Deposit Date Jul 9, 2018
Journal The Lancet
Print ISSN 0140-6736
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 384
Issue 9949
Pages 1196-1205
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736%2814%2960683-8
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1128012
Publisher URL https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0140673614606838?via%3Dihub