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A Double-Blind, Delayed-Start Trial of Rasagiline in Parkinson's Disease

882

Citations

22

References

2009

Year

TLDR

Parkinson’s disease lacks therapies that slow progression, making disease‑modifying treatment a major unmet need. This double‑blind, delayed‑start trial evaluated whether rasagiline could modify disease progression in newly diagnosed Parkinson’s patients. A total of 1,176 untreated Parkinson’s patients were randomized to receive rasagiline 1 mg or 2 mg daily for 72 weeks (early‑start) or placebo for 36 weeks followed by rasagiline for 36 weeks (delayed‑start). Rasagiline 1 mg met all three hierarchical endpoints—slower worsening between weeks 12–36, less deterioration from baseline to week 72, and non‑inferiority from weeks 48–72—while 2 mg failed to meet any endpoint, indicating a possible disease‑modifying effect only at the lower dose and warranting cautious interpretation. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00256204.

Abstract

A therapy that slows disease progression is the major unmet need in Parkinson's disease.In this double-blind trial, we examined the possibility that rasagiline has disease-modifying effects in Parkinson's disease. A total of 1176 subjects with untreated Parkinson's disease were randomly assigned to receive rasagiline (at a dose of either 1 mg or 2 mg per day) for 72 weeks (the early-start group) or placebo for 36 weeks followed by rasagiline (at a dose of either 1 mg or 2 mg per day) for 36 weeks (the delayed-start group). To determine a positive result with either dose, the early-start treatment group had to meet each of three hierarchical end points of the primary analysis based on the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS, a 176-point scale, with higher numbers indicating more severe disease): superiority to placebo in the rate of change in the UPDRS score between weeks 12 and 36, superiority to delayed-start treatment in the change in the score between baseline and week 72, and noninferiority to delayed-start treatment in the rate of change in the score between weeks 48 and 72.Early-start treatment with rasagiline at a dose of 1 mg per day met all end points in the primary analysis: a smaller mean (+/-SE) increase (rate of worsening) in the UPDRS score between weeks 12 and 36 (0.09+/-0.02 points per week in the early-start group vs. 0.14+/-0.01 points per week in the placebo group, P=0.01), less worsening in the score between baseline and week 72 (2.82+/-0.53 points in the early-start group vs. 4.52+/-0.56 points in the delayed-start group, P=0.02), and noninferiority between the two groups with respect to the rate of change in the UPDRS score between weeks 48 and 72 (0.085+/-0.02 points per week in the early-start group vs. 0.085+/-0.02 points per week in the delayed-start group, P<0.001). All three end points were not met with rasagiline at a dose of 2 mg per day, since the change in the UPDRS score between baseline and week 72 was not significantly different in the two groups (3.47+/-0.50 points in the early-start group and 3.11+/-0.50 points in the delayed-start group, P=0.60).Early treatment with rasagiline at a dose of 1 mg per day provided benefits that were consistent with a possible disease-modifying effect, but early treatment with rasagiline at a dose of 2 mg per day did not. Because the two doses were associated with different outcomes, the study results must be interpreted with caution. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00256204.)

References

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