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Neurosurgery at an earlier stage of Parkinson disease: A randomized,
controlled trial
WMM Schupbach, D Maltete, JL Houeto, S Tezenas de Montcel, L Mallet, ML
Welter, M Garguilo, C Behar, AM Bonnet, V Czernecki, B Pidoux, S Navarro, D
Dormont, P Cornu, Y Agid
Neurology 2007;68:267-271


Patients with mild-to-moderate PD who receive DBS surgery have a better
quality of life 18 months after surgery than patients receiving best medical
management, according to this study.

Twenty PD patients with mild-to-moderate disease were enrolled. Patients were
younger than age 55; had a disease duration of between 5 and 10 years; had
Hoehn and Yahr scores less than or equal to 3; experienced motor fluctuations
and off periods more than 25% of the waking day; and were employed. After
entry, patients were pair-matched for age, disease duration, and UPDRS
scores, and then randomized to receive STN DBS surgery or best medical
management. Evaluations occurred at 6, 12, and 18 months post-surgery. The
primary endpoint was change in overall quality of life as determined by the
PDQ-39.

At 18 months, surgically treated patients had a 24% improved QoL, versus no
change for medically treated patients. The surgically treated group did
better on activities of daily living, stigmatization, and bodily discomfort
subdomains of the scale. ADLs off medication also improved significantly in
surgically treated patients, while those receiving medical management
worsened. ADLs on medication did not differ between the groups. Motor scores
off and on medication showed a similar pattern. Levodopa use decreased by 57%
and motor complications improved by 83% in surgically treated patients,
versus a 12% increase in levodopa and 15% motor complication worsening for
medically treated patients.

Neuropsychological complications of surgery included transient depression
(n=4, versus 3 in medically managed patients), transient hypomania (n=5),
somatoform disorder (n=1). Anxiety and psychiatric morbidity improved as a
whole for the surgically treated group.

The authors conclude, "Neurosurgery may thus be considered superior to medical
management alone even in mild to moderate PD of < 10 years' duration, rather
than as a last resort in very advanced stages of the disease. However, the
advantages of STN stimulation must be weighed carefully against the risk with
death or sequelae of cerebral hemorrhage reported in 0 to 5% of patients
undergoing surgery."

In an accompanying editorial, David Riley and Andres Lozano write, "There is a
trend toward early DBS in PD management, and this trial offers the best
support of that trend to date..[U]ltimately the results indicate that earlier
application of DBS represents an improvement over our current approach to
management of PD."

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