Apomorphine Sublingual Film Compared with Subcutaneous Apomorphine for OFF Episodes in Parkinson’s Disease: An Open-Label, Randomized, Crossover Study

Author:

Stocchi Fabrizio1,Rascol Olivier2,Poewe Werner3,Chaudhuri K. Ray4,Kassubek Jan5,Lopez Manzanares Lydia6,Zhang Yi7,Bowling Alyssa7,Pappert Eric78,Wu Stacy7,

Affiliation:

1. University San Raffaele Roma and Institute for Research and Medical Care IRCCS San Raffaele Pisana, Rome, Italy

2. University Hospital of Toulouse, University of Toulouse and INSERM, Faculté de Médecine, Toulouse, France

3. Department of Neurology, Medical University Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria

4. Parkinson’s Foundation Centre of Excellence, King’s College Hospital and King’s College London, Denmark Hill, London, UK

5. Department of Neurology, University Hospital Ulm, Ulm, Germany

6. La Princesa University Hospital, Madrid, Spain

7. Sunovion Pharmaceuticals Inc., Marlborough, MA, USA

8. Neurology Associates, San Antonio, TX, USA

Abstract

Background: Apomorphine sublingual film (SL-APO) and subcutaneous apomorphine (SC-APO) have been used for the treatment of OFF episodes in Parkinson’s disease (PD). No study has prospectively compared efficacy and safety of these formulations. Objective: To compare SL-APO with SC-APO for treatment of OFF episodes in PD. Methods: An open-label, randomized, crossover study assessed SL-APO versus SC-APO in patients with PD and OFF episodes (N = 113). Doses were optimized in randomly assigned order. SL-APO dose initiation (10 mg) occurred in clinic; further dose optimization (15–30 mg; 5-mg increments) occurred primarily at home. SC-APO dosing (2–6 mg; 1-mg increments) occurred entirely in clinic. After a 3–7-day washout, patients were randomized 1 : 1 to 4 weeks of treatment with their optimized dose of SL-APO or SC-APO, followed by washout and 4 weeks of crossover treatment. Results: Propensity score matching applied on 159 patients (STN-DBS n = 75, MED n = 84) resulted in 40 patients in each treatment group. At 36-month follow-up, STN-DBS led to significantly better PDSS and PDQ-8 change scores, which were significantly correlated. We observed no significant effects for HADS and no significant correlations between change scores in PDSS, HADS, and LEDD. Conclusions: We report Class IIb evidence of beneficial effects of STN-DBS on quality of sleep at 36-month follow-up, which were associated with QoL improvement independent of depression and dopaminergic medication. Our study highlights the importance of sleep for assessments of DBS outcomes. Results: No difference was observed between SL-APO and SC-APO for change from predose to 90 minutes postdose in Movement Disorder Society Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale Part III score at week 4 (primary endpoint), assessed by a blinded rater (–13.6 vs. –13.8, respectively; p = NS). Overall, 72.2% of patients preferred SL-APO compared with SC-APO/no preference (p = 0.0002) per the Treatment Preference Questionnaire (secondary endpoint). Patients reported greater satisfaction with SL-APO compared with SC-APO, per mean scores of convenience (73.7 vs. 53.5) and global satisfaction (63.9 vs. 57.6) on the Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication (other endpoint). The safety profiles of both treatments were generally comparable and were well-tolerated. Conclusions: Patients reported overall preference for and greater satisfaction with SL-APO over SC-APO.

Publisher

IOS Press

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical)

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