Transdermal Nicotine Treatment and Progression of Early Parkinson's Disease.

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Epidemiologic studies show that smokers have a lower incidence of Parkinson's disease. Nicotine has been hypothesized to slow progression in early Parkinson's disease. METHODS: In a double-blind, placebo-controlled multicenter trial, we randomly assigned patients with Parkinson's disease, diagnosed within 18 months, who were in Hoehn and Yahr disease stage less than or equal to 2 (range from 0 to 5; higher scores indicate greater impairment), who were therapy naive (except for stable monoamine-oxidase-B inhibition), and not requiring dopaminergic therapy, to transdermal nicotine or placebo. The primary end point was change in Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale parts I-III (Total UPDRS) score (range from 0 to 172; higher scores indicate greater impairment) between baseline and 60 weeks (52 weeks of trial therapy, 8 weeks of washout). The first secondary end point was change in Total UPDRS from baseline to 52 weeks. Differences between groups were estimated using the Hodges-Lehmann (HL) method and tested with the exact two-sided stratified Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon test according to the intention-to-treat principle. RESULTS: Among 163 participants, 101 were assessed for the primary end point. Mean worsening of Total UPDRS was 3.5 in the placebo versus 6.0 in the nicotine group (HL-difference with 95% CI: -3 [-6 to 0], P=0.06). For the first secondary end point, analysis of 138 participants showed a mean worsening of 5.4 in the placebo versus 9.1 in the nicotine group (HL-difference with 95% CI: -4 [-7 to -1]). Dropout was mainly because of early treatment discontinuation or adverse events. Cutaneous adverse effects at the patch application site were common. In all, 34.6% of participants initiated dopaminergic therapy during participation. CONCLUSIONS: One-year transdermal nicotine treatment did not slow progression in early Parkinson's disease. (Funded by the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01560754; EudraCT number, 2010-020299-42.)

Citation: NEJM Evid. 2023 Sep;2(9):EVIDoa2200311. doi: 10.1056/EVIDoa2200311. Epub 2023 Aug 22.

Date Published: 8th Feb 2024

Registered Mode: by PubMed ID

Authors: W. H. Oertel, H. H. Muller, M. M. Unger, C. Schade-Brittinger, K. Balthasar, K. Articus, M. Brinkman, C. S. Venuto, F. Tracik, J. Eberling, K. M. Eggert, C. Kamp, K. Kieburtz, J. T. Boyd

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Created: 6th Dec 2024 at 13:22

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