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Skin patch eases Parkinson's symptoms, study says
By Will Dunham Wed Jan 3, 4:23 PM ET
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A skin patch relieved symptoms of people with
early-stage Parkinson's disease, and may offer advantages to taking pills to
treat the progressive brain disorder, researchers reported on Wednesday.
The study, involving 277 people in Canada and the United States with
early-stage Parkinson's, assessed the Neupro patch, made by Germany's
Schwarz Pharma. It delivers a drug called rotigotine that acts like a
certain brain chemical that is deficient in people with the disease.
Patients who wore the patch showed a significant easing of their symptoms
after six months of treatment, according to the study in the journal
Neurology. Those getting a placebo saw their symptoms get worse, the study
found.
The study was funded by Schwarz Pharma.
The patch is applied once a day and delivers rotigotine continuously through
the skin. Currently, many patients take pills at least three times a day to
treat symptoms of the incurable disease.
"I think it's an important new development for Parkinson's patients. For a
significant portion of patients, this may offer real advantages," Dr. Ray
Watts, chairman of the University of Alabama at Birmingham's Department of
Neurology and leader of the study, said in an interview.
Parkinson's affects nerve cells in the area of the brain that controls
muscle movement, and is characterized by a shortage of the brain chemical
dopamine. Rotigotine imitates the effects of dopamine and helps make up for
the shortage.
The disease's main symptoms are trembling in the hands, arms, legs, jaw and
face, muscle rigidity, slowness of movement and impaired balance and
coordination. The symptoms, which worsen over time, usually develop after
age 60.
The study did not directly compare the patch to pills currently used to
treat the disease.
The study unique in testing a new delivery system for a dopamine-related
drug, Watts said. The patch can provide a steady dose over 24 hours,
allowing for a more uniform delivery of medication to the brain than pills
might provide, he added.
"Patients who are doing well now on current agents, as long as they're OK
taking medication three times a day, there may or may not be an advantage to
switching.
"But for newly diagnosed patients, especially younger patients who are going
to be treated for a long time, this may be even more important," Watts said.
The patients were recruited into the study from November 2001 through April
2003.
Schwarz Pharma official Michael Davis said the company expects to win
approval from the U.S.

Food and Drug Administration for the patch to treat early-stage Parkinson's
disease in the first half of this year. Davis said the patch is already sold
in Germany, Britain and Austria.

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