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Pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic features of cabergoline.
Rationale for use in Parkinson's disease.

The appearance of late motor complications is the major drawback of long
term levodopa therapy in patients with Parkinson's disease.

Although disease progression may be a factor in the aetiology of these
complications, unfavourable properties of levodopa may promote their
development.

These include competition with amino acids for gastrointestinal absorption
and passage through the blood-brain barrier; and a short duration of action
with a rapid peak plasma concentration and rapid clearance, producing
strong receptor stimulation that rapidly alternates with neurotransmitter
vacancy and nonselective stimulation of all dopamine receptors.

Moreover, advanced neurodegeneration results in loss of the anatomical
substrate responsible for dopamine uptake and transport, whereas the
postsynaptic dopamine receptors (the therapeutic target of dopamine
agonists) are relatively spared.

In theory, long-acting direct dopamine D2 receptor agonists that also
stimulate the D1 receptor should provide a satisfactory alternative to
levodopa without the above-mentioned drawbacks.

Cabergoline possesses all the prerequisites for testing the hypothesis that
steady stimulation of D2 receptors may be able to minimise the development
of late motor complications in patients with Parkinson's disease.

It has an appropriate receptor affinity profile, with potent and
long-lasting dopaminergic stimulatory effects in 6-hydroxydopamine-lesioned
rats and in MPTP (1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyridine)-lesioned
primates; it has a consistent pharmacokinetic profile, with a very long
mean plasma elimination half-life of 65 to 110 hours, and its absorption
and excretion are unaffected by food, age or renal or hepatic disease;
moreover, when given concomitantly, cabergoline does not influence levodopa
pharmacokinetics.

Initial clinical studies have demonstrated that the efficacy of cabergoline
is comparable to that of levodopa in patients with Parkinson's disease.

The preliminary results of a long term study of initiation of treatment
with cabergoline or levodopa in patients with Parkinson's disease are in
keeping with the hypothesis that steady receptor stimulation diminishes
late motor complications.


Drugs 1998;55 Suppl 1:10-6
Fariello RG
Department of Neurosciences, Istituti Clinici di Perfezionamento, Milan,
Italy.
PMID: 9483165, UI: 98144159

<http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/>

janet paterson
52 now / 41 dx / 37 onset
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