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Clinical experience with cabergoline in patients with advanced Parkinson's
disease treated with levodopa.

The clinical efficacy of the long-acting dopamine agonist cabergoline as an
adjunct to levodopa has been investigated in controlled and uncontrolled
studies in > 1500 patients with advanced Parkinson's disease and motor
complications.

Four of these studies (including 2 comparisons with placebo and 2 with
bromocriptine), which used similar methodology (including study design,
blindness, selection criteria, treatment modalities and duration) and
measurements of efficacy and safety, are reviewed.

Compared with placebo, cabergoline 2 to 10 mg/day (median 5 mg/day) induced
a significantly higher percentage decrease in the number of 'off' hours (18
vs 45%) in a preliminary phase II study that included 37 patients with
severe motor fluctuations.

This was not associated with an increase in dyskinesia in either treatment
group.

In a subsequent phase III placebo-controlled study (n = 188 patients with
motor fluctuations), treatment with cabergoline 0.5 to 5 mg/day (median 3.5
mg/day) achieved a statistically significant decrease in levodopa dosage
compared with placebo (18 vs 3%) and improved the Unified Parkinson's
Disease Rating Scale scores for activities of daily living in a greater
number of patients (23 vs 4%).

Comparisons of cabergoline with bromocriptine have been conducted in 750
patients stabilised on levodopa therapy; one study was conducted in
patients without, and the other in patients with, previous exposure to
dopamine agonists.

Cabergoline was administered once daily at doses ranging from 0.5 to 6 mg,
and bromocriptine was given at a dosage of 5 to 40 mg/day divided into 3
administrations.

A combined analysis of the response rates obtained in the 2 studies found
cabergoline to be at least as effective and well tolerated as
bromocriptine, with a trend in favour of cabergoline in terms of response
rate and number of 'off' hours.

The majority of adverse events in this patient population were those
associated with levodopa therapy, as shown by the high frequency of adverse
events in the placebo group (68%).

Both cabergoline and bromocriptine showed a comparable incidence of adverse
events, with CNS and gastrointestinal events being the most common.

Thus, the potential advantages of cabergoline include improved patient
compliance as a result of its once-daily administration, and an increased
threshold for the development of dyskinesia as a result of the levodopa
sparing effect of cabergoline.


Drugs 1998;55 Suppl 1:17-22
Marsden CD
Institute of Neurology, London, England.
PMID: 9483166, UI: 98144160

<http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.govPubMed/>

janet paterson
52 now / 41 dx / 37 onset
613 256 8340 po box 171 almonte ontario canada K0A 1A0
a new voice: <http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Village/6263/>
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