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Deep Brain
Stimulation Treatment for Advanced Parkinson
Disease provides benefits
Newswise — Patients with advanced Parkinson
disease (PD) who received deep brain
stimulation treatment had more improvement
in movement skills and quality of life after
six months than patients who received other
medical therapy, but also had a higher risk
of a serious adverse events, according to a
study in the January 7 issue of JAMA.
Deep brain stimulation is a surgical
treatment involving the implantation of
electrodes that send electrical stimulation
to specific parts of the brain to reduce
involuntary movements and tremors.
It is the surgical intervention of choice
when PD motor (movement) complications are
inadequately managed with medications,
according to background information in the
article.
“However, recent reports highlighting
unexpected behavioral effects of stimulation
suggest that deep brain stimulation, while
improving motor function, may have other
less desirable consequences,” the authors
write.
They add that there are few randomized
trials comparing treatments, and most
studies exclude older patients.
Frances M. Weaver, Ph.D., of Hines VA
Hospital, Hines, Ill., and colleagues
conducted a randomized trial to compare the
benefits and risks of deep brain stimulation
with those of best medical therapy for
patients, of a wide age range, with PD.
A total of 255 patients with PD were
enrolled; 25 percent were age 70 years or
older.
The participants were randomized to receive
bilateral deep brain stimulation with leads
of the stimulation device implanted in the
following locations of the brain:
subthalamic nucleus (n = 60) or globus
pallidus (n = 61); or received best medical
therapy (n = 134), which included management
by movement disorder neurologists, who
monitored medication use and
nonpharmacological therapy (e.g., physical,
occupational, and speech therapy).
The researchers found that at 6 months, deep
brain stimulation patients gained an average
of 4.6 hours per day of on time (the time of
good symptom control or unimpeded motor
function) without troubling dyskinesia
(involuntary movements), while the average
change for the best medical therapy group
was 0 hours.
Motor function improved significantly with
deep brain stimulation compared with best
medical therapy, with 71 percent of deep
brain stimulation patients vs. 32 percent of
best medical therapy patients experiencing
clinically meaningful motor function
improvements at 6 months, while 3 percent of
deep brain stimulation patients and 21
percent of best medical therapy patients had
clinically worsening scores.
Compared with patients in the best medical
therapy group, patients in the deep brain
stimulation group experienced significant
improvements in the summary measure of
quality of life and on 7 of 8 PD
quality-of-life scores.
Neurocognitive testing revealed small
decrements in some areas of information
processing for patients receiving deep brain
stimulation vs. best medical therapy.
The overall risk of experiencing a serious
adverse event was 3.8 times higher in deep
brain stimulation patients than in best
medical therapy patients.
Forty-nine deep brain stimulation patients
(40 percent) experienced 82 serious adverse
events. Fifteen best medical therapy
patients (11 percent) experienced 19 serious
adverse events.
The most common serious adverse event was
surgical site infection, with other serious
adverse events including nervous system
disorders, psychiatric disorders,
device-related complications and cardiac
disorders.
“The clinical significance of the adverse
events and minor neurocognitive changes
observed in patients in the deep brain
stimulation group and, more importantly,
whether patients who undergo deep brain
stimulation view improvement in motor
function and quality of life as outweighing
adverse events, remain to be explored.
"More
detailed analyses of adverse events and
neurocognitive functioning following the
conclusion of phase 2 of this study will
shed light on these issues.
"Caution should be exercised, however,
against overstating or understating the
risks of deep brain stimulation for patients
with PD.
"Physicians must continue to weigh the
potential short-term and long-term risks
with the benefits of deep brain stimulation
in each patient,” the authors conclude.
Editorial: Neurostimulation for Parkinson
Disease
In an accompanying editorial, Günther
Deuschl, M.D., Ph.D., of the
Universitätsklinikum Schleswig-Holstein,
Kiel, Germany, comments on the findings of
Weaver and colleagues.
“Although deep brain stimulation is the most
important innovation for treatment of
advanced PD since the discovery of levodopa
[drug used to treat PD], many questions are
still unanswered. For instance, the optimal
timing for the implantation is unknown.
"The
majority of patients undergo deep brain
stimulation surgery more than 10 years after
disease onset when the patients are already
incapable of working and when the
disease-related psychosocial decline has
already begun.
"As quality of life is improved with this
treatment it may improve psychosocial
functioning in general for these advanced
stages. With the aging of the general
population, PD will become even more common
and patients with PD will get older.
"Therefore, the present results showing
similar efficacy and tolerability of deep
brain stimulation in younger and older
patients must be replicated because it is at
variance with some other reports
demonstrating lower rates of operative and
postoperative complications in younger
patients.
“Overall the results of this important study
by Weaver et al have convincingly confirmed
the 6-month efficacy of deep brain
stimulation for advanced PD in the largest
patient group studied thus far.
"However, this study, along with previous
research on this therapy, shows that such
progress cannot be made without costs in
terms of adverse effects.”
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