The Role of Levodopa Challenge in Predicting the Outcome of Subthalamic Deep Brain Stimulation

Author:

Wolke Robin1,Becktepe Jos Steffen1ORCID,Paschen Steffen1ORCID,Helmers Ann‐Kristin2,Kübler‐Weller Dorothee3ORCID,Youn Jinyoung4,Brinker Dana1,Bergman Hagai567,Kühn Andrea A.3,Fasano Alfonso891011ORCID,Deuschl Günther1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology UKSH, Christian‐Albrechts University Kiel Kiel Germany

2. Department of Neurosurgery UKSH, Christian‐Albrechts University Kiel Kiel Germany

3. Movement Disorder and Neuromodulation Unit, Department of Neurology Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin Germany

4. Department of Neurology, Samsung Medical Center School of medicine Sungkyunkwan University Seoul South Korea

5. The Edmond andLily Safra Center for Brain Sciences (ELSC) The Hebrew University Jerusalem Israel

6. Department of Medical Neurobiology (Physiology), Institute of Medical Research‐Israel Canada (IMRIC), Faculty of Medicine The Hebrew University Jerusalem Israel

7. Department of Neurosurgery, Hadassah Medical Center The Hebrew University Jerusalem Israel

8. Edmond J. Safra Program in Parkinson's Disease, Morton and Gloria Shulman Movement Disorders Clinic Toronto Western Hospital, UHN Toronto Ontario Canada

9. Division of Neurology University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

10. Krembil Brain Institute Toronto Ontario Canada

11. Center for Advancing Neurotechnological Innovation to Application (CRANIA) Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundDeep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus (STN‐DBS) is an effective and evidence‐based treatment for idiopathic Parkinson's disease (iPD). A minority of patients does not sufficiently benefit from STN‐DBS.ObjectiveThe predictive validity of the levodopa challenge for individual patients is analyzed.MethodsData from patients assessed with a preoperative Levodopa‐test and a follow‐up examination (mean ± standard deviation: 9.15 months ±3.39) from Kiel (n = 253), Berlin (n = 78) and Toronto (n = 98) were studied. Insufficient DBS outcome was defined as an overall UPDRS‐III reduction <33% compared to UPDRS‐III in med‐off at baseline or alternatively if the minimal clinically important improvement of 5 points was not reached. Single UPDRS‐items and sub‐scores were dichotomized. Following exploratory analysis, we trained supervised regression‐ and classification models for outcome prediction.ResultsData analysis confirmed significant correlation between the absolute UPDRS‐III reduction during Levodopa challenge and after stimulation. But individual improvement was inaccurately predicted with a large range of up to 30 UPDRS III points. Further analysis identified preoperative UPDRS‐III/med‐off‐scores and preoperative Levodopa‐improvement as most influential factors. The models for UPDRS‐III and sub‐scores improvement achieved comparably low accuracy.ConclusionsWith large prediction intervals, the Levodopa challenge use for patient counseling is limited, though remains important for excluding non‐responders to Levodopa. Despite these deficiencies, the current practice of patient selection is highly successful and builds not only on the Levodopa challenge. However, more specific motor tasks and further paraclinical tools for prediction need to be developed.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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