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Olanzapine and clozapine: comparative effects on motor function in
hallucinating PD patients.

OBJECTIVE: To compare olanzapine and clozapine for safety and efficacy
measures of psychosis and motor function in patients with PD and chronic
hallucinations.

BACKGROUND: Hallucinations occur in approximately one third of patients
with PD treated chronically with dopaminergic drugs.

Although clozapine is known to be an effective antipsychotic agent that
does not significantly exacerbate parkinsonism, its use requires frequent
blood count assessment.

Olanzapine is another novel antipsychotic that is not associated with blood
dyscrasia, and if equally effective could become the preferred drug for
treating hallucinations in subjects with PD.

METHODS: A randomized, double-blind, parallel comparison of olanzapine and
clozapine in patients with PD with chronic hallucinations was conducted.

The primary outcome measure was the Scale for the Assessment of Positive
Symptoms (SAPS) for psychotic symptoms.

The Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) motor subscale was
used as a secondary outcome measure and as a safety monitoring tool.

RESULTS: After 15 patients had completed the study, safety stopping rules
were invoked because of exacerbated parkinsonism in olanzapine-treated
subjects.

UPDRS motor impairment scores from baseline to study end significantly
increased with olanzapine treatment, and change scores between the
olanzapine and clozapine groups significantly differed.

The primary clinical domains responsible for the motor decline were gait
and bradykinesia.

Even with a smaller patient number than originally anticipated, clozapine
significantly improved hallucinations and overall behavioral assessment,
whereas olanzapine had no effect.

CONCLUSIONS: At the doses studied, olanzapine aggravates parkinsonism in
comparison with clozapine and should not be regularly used in the
management of hallucinations in patients with PD.


PMID: 10993997, UI: 20451175
Neurology 2000 Sep 26;55(6):789-94
Goetz CG, Blasucci LM, Leurgans S, Pappert EJ
Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, IL; and San Marco
Neurology

janet paterson
53 now / 44 dx cd / 43 onset cd / 41 dx pd / 37 onset pd
TEL: 613 256 8340 URL: http://www.geocities.com/janet313/
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