Intestinal Gel Works Better than Oral Medication for Parkinson’s Patients, Study Finds

Share

Contact: Keith Herrell
(513) 558-4559
keith.herrell@uc.edu

CINCINNATI—An intestinal gel delivered via a surgically implanted tube works better for Parkinson’s disease patients than similar medication taken orally, according to the results of a recently concluded clinical trial whose sites included Cincinnati.

Use of the levodopa-carbidopa intestinal gel (LCIG) was found to reduce “off” time in patients with advanced Parkinson’s disease who participated in the phase-3 randomized, double-blind clinical trial. “Off” time occurs when Parkinson’s symptoms such as tremor, slowness, stiffness and walking difficulty return as the beneficial effects of oral treatments wear off.

Cincinnati was one of 11 U.S. sites that participated in the trial, supported by Abbott. (Three sites in New Zealand also participated.) The study co-author and principal investigator at the Cincinnati site was Alberto Espay, MD, Associate Professor in the University of Cincinnati (UC) Department of Neurology and a neurologist with the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Family Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders at the UC Neuroscience Institute, a multidisciplinary component of UC Health.

Results of the trial will be among the works Dr. Espay is presenting Thursday, April 26, in the Scientific Highlights in the Field of Movement Disorders session at the American Academy of Neurology’s (AAN) 64th annual meeting in New Orleans. Study results will also be presented as part of the Emerging Science program.

“The results of the LCIG clinical trial are robustly positive,” says Dr. Espay. “They provide encouraging data for its regulatory review and the framework for eventually implementing it as a therapy, with the potential to dramatically improve the quality of life in individuals with Parkinson’s disease disabled by severe motor complications.”

Parkinson’s disease is a chronic, degenerative neurological disorder in which certain dopamine-producing cells in a region of the brain begin to die. When these cells die, neurons in the brain fire erratically, leaving patients less able to direct or control their movements.

The delivery system used in the clinical trial feeds the commonly prescribed Parkinson’s drugs levodopa (the precursor of dopamine) and carbidopa into the upper intestine via a small tube inserted directly into the first part of the small bowel. The medication is suspended as a stable gel from a cassette worn outside the body. A programmable pump allows the patient or physician to adjust the delivery of medication.

“With other medications, the stimulus of dopamine receptors is given, then taken away, in multiple cycles,” says Dr. Espay. “But with this system, we’re basically bathing the patient’s brain in dopamine at all times. This gives patients the continuity of stimulation of dopamine receptors, and therefore more stability of function, that they can’t get with any other means. Our patients are also released from the shackles of having to take medication at certain times throughout the day.”

In Cincinnati, the tube was implanted at UC Health University Hospital by Nathan Schmulewitz, MD, who worked in cooperation with Dr. Espay on the clinical trial. Dr. Schmulewitz is an associate professor in the division of digestive diseases.

In the clinical trial, which lasted three months, 71 participants were randomized to receive either the continuous infusion of LCIG and dummy pills or a dummy intestinal gel and pills that contained levodopa and carbidopa. At the start of the study, the average person had Parkinson’s disease for about 11 years and experienced 6.6 hours of “off” time per day.

The study found that the continuous LCIG reduced “off” time by an average of nearly two extra hours per day and improved “on” time without troublesome movements by an average of two hours per day compared to people taking standard levodopa-carbidopa.

“Less ‘off’ time for people with Parkinson’s means more time during the day in which they can enjoy the benefits of levodopa-carbidopa therapy and experience improved quality of life,” says lead study author C. Warren Olanow, MD, professor of neurology and neuroscience at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York and an AAN Fellow.

The most common side effects associated with LCIG treatment involved complications due to inserting the device, abdominal pain, pain during the procedure and nausea.

With the conclusion of the phase 3 trial, LCIG will undergo further study and review required before approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. It is already approved in 40 countries outside the U.S.

Dr. Espay reports that he has received research support for the clinical trial and has received compensation from Solvay Pharmaceuticals (now Abbott) and Abbott for serving as a consultant and scientific advisory board member.

 

* * *

The UC Neuroscience Institute, a regional center of excellence, is dedicated to patient care, research, education, and the development of new treatments for stroke, brain and spinal tumors, epilepsy, traumatic brain and spinal injury, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, disorders of the senses (swallowing, voice, hearing, pain, taste and smell), and psychiatric conditions (bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and depression).

This entry was posted in Press Releases and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink. Both comments and trackbacks are currently closed.
  • Print This Page
  • Make an Appointment: Schedule Now
  • UCNI Weekly Blog
  • Join Our Email List
    for Weekly Updates

    Click here to continue.
  • Hope Stories

    • Charlie’s Story: Epilepsy

      Charlie's Story: EpilepsyBy Charlie Shor I have had many adventures in my 57 years, and I have accomplished much. But the main message of my story, which I have been given the opportunity to share, is that anything is possible. If you have...
    • Alison’s Story: Ruptured Aneurysm following Neurotrauma

      Alison's Story: Ruptured Aneurysm following Neurotrauma She has completed medical school, has won the Flying Pig Marathon and has reached the summit of two of Colorado’s 14,000-foot peaks.Today Dr. Alison Delgado is tackling a mountain of a different kind. Step by hard-earned step, word by remembered...
    • Courtney’s Story: Traumatic Spine Injury

      Courtney's Story: Traumatic Spine Injury Courtney is positive that she was wearing her seatbelt. Perhaps that is why her head and neck – thankfully -- were fine. Perhaps that is also why her midsection was so violently impacted, as the force of the rollover twisted...
    • Scott’s Story

      Scott's Story Scott has no recollection of the concrete wall. His wife, Sondra, knows only what she was told. And that, she says, is something of a fish story, with the wall growing with every telling … from eight feet, to 10...
    • Zettie’s Story: Aphasia

      Zettie's Story: Aphasia In November of 2004, Zettie Williams confronted what neurologists consider one of the most feared consequences of stroke. When a therapist showed her a photograph of her son, she knew she was looking at her son, but she couldn’t say...
    • Alisha’s Story: Acoustic Neuroma

      Alisha's Story: Acoustic Neuroma There was a time in Alisha’s young life when she was angry at her fate and bitter about her life. “I wondered why this had to happen to me,” she said. Her outlook has changed to one of eagerness and...
    • Leah’s Story: Arteriovenous Malformation (AVM)

      Leah's Story: Arteriovenous Malformation (AVM)Leah is a young woman who sings, dances, and plays the guitar. She is also a survivor of an arteriovenous malformation (AVM). It is rare for someone in her mid-teens to have had an AVM, an abnormal tangle of blood vessels...
    • Alison’s Story: Ruptured Aneurysm following Neurotrauma

      Alison's Story: Ruptured Aneurysm following NeurotraumaShe has completed medical school, has won the Flying Pig Marathon and has reached the summit of two of Colorado’s 14,000-foot peaks.Today Dr. Alison Delgado is tackling a mountain of a different kind. Step by hard-earned step, word by remembered...
    • Amber’s Story: Ruptured Aneurysm

      Amber's Story: Ruptured Aneurysm The only visible sign of Amber Gray’s ordeal is the long slender scar   that runs along her forearm. It is the area where a surgeon carefully   removed her radial artery, which was needed to bypass a damaged artery   in her...
    • Laura’s Story: Traumatic Spine Injury

      Laura’s Story: Traumatic Spine Injury What began as a shortcut became, for Laura Brunner, a monumental detour. Laura, a prominent Cincinnati business executive, was enjoying a mountain hike in Montana with fellow trustees from the Dan Beard Council of the Boy Scouts when the group decided...