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Imaging links insula and frontal cortex to anxiety in Parkinson’s disease

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The insula and frontal cortex are involved in the development of anxiety in adults with Parkinson’s disease, according to imaging data from 108 individuals.

Anxiety occurs in approximately 31% of Parkinson’s disease patients, but the underlying mechanisms are not well understood, wrote Nacim Betrouni, MD, of the University of Lille, France, and colleagues. Previous research has shown associations between anxiety severity and increased activity in brain areas of emotion processing, based on MRI and positron emission tomography, but electroencephalography (EEG) has not been widely used, they said.

In a study published in Neurophysiologie Clinique , the researchers compared EEG spectral patterns and functional resting-state networks in Parkinson’s disease patients with and without anxiety disorders. They identified data from 33 PD patients who met criteria for anxiety, and 75 without anxiety. The average age of the patients was 65 years, and the average disease duration was 9.76 years in anxiety patients and 7.83 years in patients without anxiety.

Overall, findings on spectral analysis showed an association between anxiety and changes in the alpha activity in the right frontal cortex, the researchers said. They also found the relative power in the alpha1 frequency band in the right prefrontal cortex was lower in patients with anxiety than without; this finding was significantly associated with avoidance behavior on a subscale of the Parkinson’s Anxiety Scale (PAS_C, P = .035). A trend toward a significant association with episodic anxiety was noted (PAS_B, P = .06), but no significant associations were noted for persistent anxiety or the total scale score.

The imaging also showed an increased connectivity between the insula and the posterior cingulate cortex in several frequency bands in the anxiety patients, the researchers said. “The increased connectivity observed here may be a marker of the maintenance of avoidance behaviors that characterize anxiety in PD,” they noted.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the small and unbalanced proportion of the study population with anxiety, and the consideration of global anxiety only, without distinguishing anxiety subtypes, the researchers noted. Another limitation was the use only of static EEC patterns, without using dynamic patterns, they said.

The study is the first known to use EEG to explore the mechanisms of PD-related anxiety and “the reported results provide new insights, supporting findings of previous studies using other modalities, mainly rs-fMRI, and show that EEG could be a relevant technique to explore these disorders,” the researchers wrote.

However, more research is needed to confirm the findings in patients with a larger panel of anxiety disorders, they concluded.

The study was supported by the Michael J. Fox Foundation. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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The insula and frontal cortex are involved in the development of anxiety in adults with Parkinson’s disease, according to imaging data from 108 individuals.

Anxiety occurs in approximately 31% of Parkinson’s disease patients, but the underlying mechanisms are not well understood, wrote Nacim Betrouni, MD, of the University of Lille, France, and colleagues. Previous research has shown associations between anxiety severity and increased activity in brain areas of emotion processing, based on MRI and positron emission tomography, but electroencephalography (EEG) has not been widely used, they said.

In a study published in Neurophysiologie Clinique , the researchers compared EEG spectral patterns and functional resting-state networks in Parkinson’s disease patients with and without anxiety disorders. They identified data from 33 PD patients who met criteria for anxiety, and 75 without anxiety. The average age of the patients was 65 years, and the average disease duration was 9.76 years in anxiety patients and 7.83 years in patients without anxiety.

Overall, findings on spectral analysis showed an association between anxiety and changes in the alpha activity in the right frontal cortex, the researchers said. They also found the relative power in the alpha1 frequency band in the right prefrontal cortex was lower in patients with anxiety than without; this finding was significantly associated with avoidance behavior on a subscale of the Parkinson’s Anxiety Scale (PAS_C, P = .035). A trend toward a significant association with episodic anxiety was noted (PAS_B, P = .06), but no significant associations were noted for persistent anxiety or the total scale score.

The imaging also showed an increased connectivity between the insula and the posterior cingulate cortex in several frequency bands in the anxiety patients, the researchers said. “The increased connectivity observed here may be a marker of the maintenance of avoidance behaviors that characterize anxiety in PD,” they noted.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the small and unbalanced proportion of the study population with anxiety, and the consideration of global anxiety only, without distinguishing anxiety subtypes, the researchers noted. Another limitation was the use only of static EEC patterns, without using dynamic patterns, they said.

The study is the first known to use EEG to explore the mechanisms of PD-related anxiety and “the reported results provide new insights, supporting findings of previous studies using other modalities, mainly rs-fMRI, and show that EEG could be a relevant technique to explore these disorders,” the researchers wrote.

However, more research is needed to confirm the findings in patients with a larger panel of anxiety disorders, they concluded.

The study was supported by the Michael J. Fox Foundation. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

The insula and frontal cortex are involved in the development of anxiety in adults with Parkinson’s disease, according to imaging data from 108 individuals.

Anxiety occurs in approximately 31% of Parkinson’s disease patients, but the underlying mechanisms are not well understood, wrote Nacim Betrouni, MD, of the University of Lille, France, and colleagues. Previous research has shown associations between anxiety severity and increased activity in brain areas of emotion processing, based on MRI and positron emission tomography, but electroencephalography (EEG) has not been widely used, they said.

In a study published in Neurophysiologie Clinique , the researchers compared EEG spectral patterns and functional resting-state networks in Parkinson’s disease patients with and without anxiety disorders. They identified data from 33 PD patients who met criteria for anxiety, and 75 without anxiety. The average age of the patients was 65 years, and the average disease duration was 9.76 years in anxiety patients and 7.83 years in patients without anxiety.

Overall, findings on spectral analysis showed an association between anxiety and changes in the alpha activity in the right frontal cortex, the researchers said. They also found the relative power in the alpha1 frequency band in the right prefrontal cortex was lower in patients with anxiety than without; this finding was significantly associated with avoidance behavior on a subscale of the Parkinson’s Anxiety Scale (PAS_C, P = .035). A trend toward a significant association with episodic anxiety was noted (PAS_B, P = .06), but no significant associations were noted for persistent anxiety or the total scale score.

The imaging also showed an increased connectivity between the insula and the posterior cingulate cortex in several frequency bands in the anxiety patients, the researchers said. “The increased connectivity observed here may be a marker of the maintenance of avoidance behaviors that characterize anxiety in PD,” they noted.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the small and unbalanced proportion of the study population with anxiety, and the consideration of global anxiety only, without distinguishing anxiety subtypes, the researchers noted. Another limitation was the use only of static EEC patterns, without using dynamic patterns, they said.

The study is the first known to use EEG to explore the mechanisms of PD-related anxiety and “the reported results provide new insights, supporting findings of previous studies using other modalities, mainly rs-fMRI, and show that EEG could be a relevant technique to explore these disorders,” the researchers wrote.

However, more research is needed to confirm the findings in patients with a larger panel of anxiety disorders, they concluded.

The study was supported by the Michael J. Fox Foundation. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Restless legs syndrome surged early during pandemic

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Mon, 02/14/2022 - 10:04

Individuals with restless legs syndrome showed an increase in symptom severity in the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States in 2020, but this increase had waned by 2021, according to data from 500 participants in the National Restless Legs Syndrome Opioid Registry.

Sufferers of restless legs syndrome (RLS) experience not only sleep disturbance, but also daytime sleepiness, and high levels of depression, anxiety, and panic, wrote Benjamin Wipper of Harvard Medical School, Boston, and colleagues.

“Considering the link between RLS and psychiatric illness, it has been speculated that there may have been increases in RLS symptom severity alongside the recent rise in depression and anxiety,” but this association has not been explored, they said.

In a study published in Sleep Medicine , the researchers reviewed data from 500 adult participants in the National RLS Opioid Registry, a longitudinal observational study. Participants reported RLS symptom severity before and during the COVID-19 pandemic at 6-month intervals. Survey responses were collected from the early phase of the pandemic in the United States in January/February 2020, then in April/May 2020, and then 6 months later, from September 2020 through February 2021, and also 1 year later, in March 2021 through June 2021.

Participants completed a baseline phone interview and online survey, with symptoms assessed via the International Restless Legs Syndrome Study Group severity scale (IRLS), the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), the General Anxiety Disorder-7 scale (GAD-7), and the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9).

In all, 153 participants completed surveys during January and February 2020, and 155 completed surveys during April and May 2020. Baseline characteristics were similar for all participants.

In a between-subjects analysis for these time periods, symptom scores on the IRLS were significantly higher in January/February 2020; participants were approximately twice as likely to have IRLS scores of 20 or higher compared to April/May 2020 (37.7% vs. 20.9%).

The researchers also compared responses by the same participants at baseline and 6 months later, from September 2020 through February 2021, and 1 year later, from March 2021 through June 2021. In this within-subjects analysis, 51.3% of the participants had increased IRLS scores in spring 2020. Participants were significantly more likely to have IRLS scores of 20 or above in the early COVID-19 period in April and May 2020 compared with baseline (37.7% vs. 26.6%). Both PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores were higher during early COVID-19 in April and May 2020 than at baseline.

“Changes in IRLS were also significantly correlated with changes in both PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores, providing further support for the associations of RLS to both depression and anxiety,” the researchers wrote. “Notably, individuals who completed surveys in January and February 2020 did not see increases in RLS severity or other mental health questionnaire values on subsequent six-month surveys completed during the pandemic or on the following iteration of surveys 1 year later. We suspect that these findings may be at least partially related to the timing of the surveys,” the researchers said. Six-month survey data for most patients were collected during a decline in cases and hospitalizations, and 1-year data in early 2021 may have reflected optimism with the availability of vaccines, they said. 

The study findings were limited by several factors including the observational design, which prevented conclusions about causality, and the lack of data on the effect of COVID-19 infection on RLS symptoms, which should be investigated in future studies, the researchers said.

However, the results are the first evidence of increased RLS symptom severity during the COVID-19 pandemic, and elevated scores were associated with sleep disturbance, depression, and anxiety, they wrote. “These data suggest that clinicians should attend to RLS symptoms during the current pandemic and in future instances of socioeconomic and/or political uncertainty. Future studies need to confirm these findings in other populations of patients with RLS,” they concluded.

The National RLS Opioid Registry has received research funding from the RLS Foundation, the Baszucki Brain Research Fund, Florence Petrlik Family Foundation, Diane and Richard Brainerd, Steven Silin, and Jerry Blakeley. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Individuals with restless legs syndrome showed an increase in symptom severity in the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States in 2020, but this increase had waned by 2021, according to data from 500 participants in the National Restless Legs Syndrome Opioid Registry.

Sufferers of restless legs syndrome (RLS) experience not only sleep disturbance, but also daytime sleepiness, and high levels of depression, anxiety, and panic, wrote Benjamin Wipper of Harvard Medical School, Boston, and colleagues.

“Considering the link between RLS and psychiatric illness, it has been speculated that there may have been increases in RLS symptom severity alongside the recent rise in depression and anxiety,” but this association has not been explored, they said.

In a study published in Sleep Medicine , the researchers reviewed data from 500 adult participants in the National RLS Opioid Registry, a longitudinal observational study. Participants reported RLS symptom severity before and during the COVID-19 pandemic at 6-month intervals. Survey responses were collected from the early phase of the pandemic in the United States in January/February 2020, then in April/May 2020, and then 6 months later, from September 2020 through February 2021, and also 1 year later, in March 2021 through June 2021.

Participants completed a baseline phone interview and online survey, with symptoms assessed via the International Restless Legs Syndrome Study Group severity scale (IRLS), the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), the General Anxiety Disorder-7 scale (GAD-7), and the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9).

In all, 153 participants completed surveys during January and February 2020, and 155 completed surveys during April and May 2020. Baseline characteristics were similar for all participants.

In a between-subjects analysis for these time periods, symptom scores on the IRLS were significantly higher in January/February 2020; participants were approximately twice as likely to have IRLS scores of 20 or higher compared to April/May 2020 (37.7% vs. 20.9%).

The researchers also compared responses by the same participants at baseline and 6 months later, from September 2020 through February 2021, and 1 year later, from March 2021 through June 2021. In this within-subjects analysis, 51.3% of the participants had increased IRLS scores in spring 2020. Participants were significantly more likely to have IRLS scores of 20 or above in the early COVID-19 period in April and May 2020 compared with baseline (37.7% vs. 26.6%). Both PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores were higher during early COVID-19 in April and May 2020 than at baseline.

“Changes in IRLS were also significantly correlated with changes in both PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores, providing further support for the associations of RLS to both depression and anxiety,” the researchers wrote. “Notably, individuals who completed surveys in January and February 2020 did not see increases in RLS severity or other mental health questionnaire values on subsequent six-month surveys completed during the pandemic or on the following iteration of surveys 1 year later. We suspect that these findings may be at least partially related to the timing of the surveys,” the researchers said. Six-month survey data for most patients were collected during a decline in cases and hospitalizations, and 1-year data in early 2021 may have reflected optimism with the availability of vaccines, they said. 

The study findings were limited by several factors including the observational design, which prevented conclusions about causality, and the lack of data on the effect of COVID-19 infection on RLS symptoms, which should be investigated in future studies, the researchers said.

However, the results are the first evidence of increased RLS symptom severity during the COVID-19 pandemic, and elevated scores were associated with sleep disturbance, depression, and anxiety, they wrote. “These data suggest that clinicians should attend to RLS symptoms during the current pandemic and in future instances of socioeconomic and/or political uncertainty. Future studies need to confirm these findings in other populations of patients with RLS,” they concluded.

The National RLS Opioid Registry has received research funding from the RLS Foundation, the Baszucki Brain Research Fund, Florence Petrlik Family Foundation, Diane and Richard Brainerd, Steven Silin, and Jerry Blakeley. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

Individuals with restless legs syndrome showed an increase in symptom severity in the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States in 2020, but this increase had waned by 2021, according to data from 500 participants in the National Restless Legs Syndrome Opioid Registry.

Sufferers of restless legs syndrome (RLS) experience not only sleep disturbance, but also daytime sleepiness, and high levels of depression, anxiety, and panic, wrote Benjamin Wipper of Harvard Medical School, Boston, and colleagues.

“Considering the link between RLS and psychiatric illness, it has been speculated that there may have been increases in RLS symptom severity alongside the recent rise in depression and anxiety,” but this association has not been explored, they said.

In a study published in Sleep Medicine , the researchers reviewed data from 500 adult participants in the National RLS Opioid Registry, a longitudinal observational study. Participants reported RLS symptom severity before and during the COVID-19 pandemic at 6-month intervals. Survey responses were collected from the early phase of the pandemic in the United States in January/February 2020, then in April/May 2020, and then 6 months later, from September 2020 through February 2021, and also 1 year later, in March 2021 through June 2021.

Participants completed a baseline phone interview and online survey, with symptoms assessed via the International Restless Legs Syndrome Study Group severity scale (IRLS), the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), the General Anxiety Disorder-7 scale (GAD-7), and the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9).

In all, 153 participants completed surveys during January and February 2020, and 155 completed surveys during April and May 2020. Baseline characteristics were similar for all participants.

In a between-subjects analysis for these time periods, symptom scores on the IRLS were significantly higher in January/February 2020; participants were approximately twice as likely to have IRLS scores of 20 or higher compared to April/May 2020 (37.7% vs. 20.9%).

The researchers also compared responses by the same participants at baseline and 6 months later, from September 2020 through February 2021, and 1 year later, from March 2021 through June 2021. In this within-subjects analysis, 51.3% of the participants had increased IRLS scores in spring 2020. Participants were significantly more likely to have IRLS scores of 20 or above in the early COVID-19 period in April and May 2020 compared with baseline (37.7% vs. 26.6%). Both PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores were higher during early COVID-19 in April and May 2020 than at baseline.

“Changes in IRLS were also significantly correlated with changes in both PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores, providing further support for the associations of RLS to both depression and anxiety,” the researchers wrote. “Notably, individuals who completed surveys in January and February 2020 did not see increases in RLS severity or other mental health questionnaire values on subsequent six-month surveys completed during the pandemic or on the following iteration of surveys 1 year later. We suspect that these findings may be at least partially related to the timing of the surveys,” the researchers said. Six-month survey data for most patients were collected during a decline in cases and hospitalizations, and 1-year data in early 2021 may have reflected optimism with the availability of vaccines, they said. 

The study findings were limited by several factors including the observational design, which prevented conclusions about causality, and the lack of data on the effect of COVID-19 infection on RLS symptoms, which should be investigated in future studies, the researchers said.

However, the results are the first evidence of increased RLS symptom severity during the COVID-19 pandemic, and elevated scores were associated with sleep disturbance, depression, and anxiety, they wrote. “These data suggest that clinicians should attend to RLS symptoms during the current pandemic and in future instances of socioeconomic and/or political uncertainty. Future studies need to confirm these findings in other populations of patients with RLS,” they concluded.

The National RLS Opioid Registry has received research funding from the RLS Foundation, the Baszucki Brain Research Fund, Florence Petrlik Family Foundation, Diane and Richard Brainerd, Steven Silin, and Jerry Blakeley. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Positive phase 3 topline results for early Parkinson’s drug

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Topline results from a phase 3 trial of P2B001, a fixed-dose combination of extended release (ER) formulations of pramipexole and rasagiline, showed it was superior to its individual components as a first-line treatment for early Parkinson’s disease.

Study participants also reported less daytime sleepiness with P2B001, according to a statement from the drug’s manufacturer.

The trial data “support our view that P2B001 can provide clinical benefits comparable to higher doses of commercially available dopamine agonists, while mitigating the side effects typically associated with this class of medicine such as somnolence, orthostatic hypotension, and hallucinations,” Sheila Oren, MD, chief executive officer of Pharma Two B, said in a statement.

“This is important for PD patients of all ages and is critical for the elderly, who typically do not tolerate side effects of dopamine agonists,” Dr. Oren added.
 

Promising results

The 12-week, international, randomized, double-blind trial was designed to study the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of P2B001 compared to its individual components and to a calibration arm of pramipexole ER in 544 patients with early PD.

Participants received P2B001, a once-daily ER combination product composed of pramipexole 0.6 mg and rasagiline 0.75 mg; pramipexole ER capsule 0.6 mg once daily; rasagiline ER capsule 0.75 mg once daily; or the currently marketed product pramipexole ER capsules titrated to an optimal dose for each individual patient (1.5-4.5 mg).

The adjusted mean change from baseline in total Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) score was –2.66 points for P2B001 versus pramipexole (P = .0018) and –3.30 points for P2B001 versus rasagiline (P = .0001). There was no significant difference in UPDRS scores between P2B001 and pramipexole ER.

The adjusted mean change from baseline in the Epworth Sleepiness Scale score for P2B001 versus pramipexole ER was –2.66 points (P < .0001).

Treatment-related adverse events were mostly mild or moderate and were similar among groups.

“The initiation of treatment of patients with Parkinson’s disease represents an area of unmet need due to the side effects associated with current treatments,” Warren Olanow, MD, professor emeritus of neurology and neuroscience at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, said in a statement from the manufacturer.

“Based on the data from this well-designed, rigorous, active-controlled study, P2B001 has the potential to become a leading treatment option for PD, particularly as first line therapy for early-stage patients of all ages,” Dr. Olanow added.

The company plans to file a new drug application in 2022.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Topline results from a phase 3 trial of P2B001, a fixed-dose combination of extended release (ER) formulations of pramipexole and rasagiline, showed it was superior to its individual components as a first-line treatment for early Parkinson’s disease.

Study participants also reported less daytime sleepiness with P2B001, according to a statement from the drug’s manufacturer.

The trial data “support our view that P2B001 can provide clinical benefits comparable to higher doses of commercially available dopamine agonists, while mitigating the side effects typically associated with this class of medicine such as somnolence, orthostatic hypotension, and hallucinations,” Sheila Oren, MD, chief executive officer of Pharma Two B, said in a statement.

“This is important for PD patients of all ages and is critical for the elderly, who typically do not tolerate side effects of dopamine agonists,” Dr. Oren added.
 

Promising results

The 12-week, international, randomized, double-blind trial was designed to study the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of P2B001 compared to its individual components and to a calibration arm of pramipexole ER in 544 patients with early PD.

Participants received P2B001, a once-daily ER combination product composed of pramipexole 0.6 mg and rasagiline 0.75 mg; pramipexole ER capsule 0.6 mg once daily; rasagiline ER capsule 0.75 mg once daily; or the currently marketed product pramipexole ER capsules titrated to an optimal dose for each individual patient (1.5-4.5 mg).

The adjusted mean change from baseline in total Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) score was –2.66 points for P2B001 versus pramipexole (P = .0018) and –3.30 points for P2B001 versus rasagiline (P = .0001). There was no significant difference in UPDRS scores between P2B001 and pramipexole ER.

The adjusted mean change from baseline in the Epworth Sleepiness Scale score for P2B001 versus pramipexole ER was –2.66 points (P < .0001).

Treatment-related adverse events were mostly mild or moderate and were similar among groups.

“The initiation of treatment of patients with Parkinson’s disease represents an area of unmet need due to the side effects associated with current treatments,” Warren Olanow, MD, professor emeritus of neurology and neuroscience at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, said in a statement from the manufacturer.

“Based on the data from this well-designed, rigorous, active-controlled study, P2B001 has the potential to become a leading treatment option for PD, particularly as first line therapy for early-stage patients of all ages,” Dr. Olanow added.

The company plans to file a new drug application in 2022.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

Topline results from a phase 3 trial of P2B001, a fixed-dose combination of extended release (ER) formulations of pramipexole and rasagiline, showed it was superior to its individual components as a first-line treatment for early Parkinson’s disease.

Study participants also reported less daytime sleepiness with P2B001, according to a statement from the drug’s manufacturer.

The trial data “support our view that P2B001 can provide clinical benefits comparable to higher doses of commercially available dopamine agonists, while mitigating the side effects typically associated with this class of medicine such as somnolence, orthostatic hypotension, and hallucinations,” Sheila Oren, MD, chief executive officer of Pharma Two B, said in a statement.

“This is important for PD patients of all ages and is critical for the elderly, who typically do not tolerate side effects of dopamine agonists,” Dr. Oren added.
 

Promising results

The 12-week, international, randomized, double-blind trial was designed to study the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of P2B001 compared to its individual components and to a calibration arm of pramipexole ER in 544 patients with early PD.

Participants received P2B001, a once-daily ER combination product composed of pramipexole 0.6 mg and rasagiline 0.75 mg; pramipexole ER capsule 0.6 mg once daily; rasagiline ER capsule 0.75 mg once daily; or the currently marketed product pramipexole ER capsules titrated to an optimal dose for each individual patient (1.5-4.5 mg).

The adjusted mean change from baseline in total Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) score was –2.66 points for P2B001 versus pramipexole (P = .0018) and –3.30 points for P2B001 versus rasagiline (P = .0001). There was no significant difference in UPDRS scores between P2B001 and pramipexole ER.

The adjusted mean change from baseline in the Epworth Sleepiness Scale score for P2B001 versus pramipexole ER was –2.66 points (P < .0001).

Treatment-related adverse events were mostly mild or moderate and were similar among groups.

“The initiation of treatment of patients with Parkinson’s disease represents an area of unmet need due to the side effects associated with current treatments,” Warren Olanow, MD, professor emeritus of neurology and neuroscience at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, said in a statement from the manufacturer.

“Based on the data from this well-designed, rigorous, active-controlled study, P2B001 has the potential to become a leading treatment option for PD, particularly as first line therapy for early-stage patients of all ages,” Dr. Olanow added.

The company plans to file a new drug application in 2022.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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COVID-19 hospital data: New-onset seizures more common than breakthrough seizures

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An analysis of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 finds that those with no history of epilepsy had more than 3 times the odds of suffering a new-onset seizure than patients with epilepsy were to have breakthrough seizures (odds radio [OR] 3.15, P < .0001), researchers reported at the annual meeting of the American Epilepsy Society.

“If you have COVID and you have a seizure, it’s more likely that you’re having it for the first time, and it’s not as likely that you have epilepsy,” study lead author Neeraj Singh, MD, a neurologist at the New York-based Northwell Health system, said in an interview. “That’s new. We don’t normally see that when someone has a bacterial or viral infection. It’s demonstrating that this infection is having direct effect on the brain and brain signals.”

According to Dr. Singh, there’s little data about seizures in patients with COVID-19 because doctors have focused on other symptoms. A 2021 multicenter study found that electrographic seizures were detected in 9.6% of 197 patients with COVID-19 who were referred for cEEG.

For the new study, Dr. Singh and a colleague tracked 917 patients with COVID-19 in the Northwell Health system who were treated from Feb. 14 to June 14, 2020, with antiepileptic medication. Of the patients, 451 had a history of epilepsy, and 466 did not.

According to Dr. Singh, 27.6% of the patients without a history of epilepsy had new-onset seizures, while 10.1% of the patients with history of epilepsy had breakthrough seizures. The difference in odds was more than threefold after adjustment. (Among all COVID-19 patients, he said, perhaps 8%-16% had seizures).

The researchers also found that patients with new-onset seizures stayed in the hospital much longer (average, 26.9 days) than any patients with a known history of epilepsy (12.8 days, P < .0001, for those who had breakthrough seizures and 10.9 days, P < .0001, for those who didn’t).

In addition, the researchers found that having any seizures – new-onset or breakthrough – was linked to higher risk of death (OR 1.41, P = .03).

Antiseizure medications are key treatments for these patients, Dr. Singh said. As for the patients with new-onset seizures who recover from COVID-19, Dr. Singh said, “it’s suspected that these people are going to have a new diagnosis of epilepsy, not just a one-time seizure.”

The findings suggest that some patients with epilepsy are protected against COVID-19-related seizures because they take antiepileptic medications that “protect the brain from getting a trigger for an abnormal signal that leads to a seizure,” he said. “That’s one possibility.”

What can neurologists learn from the study? Dr. Singh recommends a “lower threshold” to recommend or approve EEGs in patients with COVID-19 who are confused/altered when they come in, especially if this is not normal. “They may actually be having silent seizures that no one’s noticing,” he said.

No study funding was reported. The authors reported no relevant disclosures.

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An analysis of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 finds that those with no history of epilepsy had more than 3 times the odds of suffering a new-onset seizure than patients with epilepsy were to have breakthrough seizures (odds radio [OR] 3.15, P < .0001), researchers reported at the annual meeting of the American Epilepsy Society.

“If you have COVID and you have a seizure, it’s more likely that you’re having it for the first time, and it’s not as likely that you have epilepsy,” study lead author Neeraj Singh, MD, a neurologist at the New York-based Northwell Health system, said in an interview. “That’s new. We don’t normally see that when someone has a bacterial or viral infection. It’s demonstrating that this infection is having direct effect on the brain and brain signals.”

According to Dr. Singh, there’s little data about seizures in patients with COVID-19 because doctors have focused on other symptoms. A 2021 multicenter study found that electrographic seizures were detected in 9.6% of 197 patients with COVID-19 who were referred for cEEG.

For the new study, Dr. Singh and a colleague tracked 917 patients with COVID-19 in the Northwell Health system who were treated from Feb. 14 to June 14, 2020, with antiepileptic medication. Of the patients, 451 had a history of epilepsy, and 466 did not.

According to Dr. Singh, 27.6% of the patients without a history of epilepsy had new-onset seizures, while 10.1% of the patients with history of epilepsy had breakthrough seizures. The difference in odds was more than threefold after adjustment. (Among all COVID-19 patients, he said, perhaps 8%-16% had seizures).

The researchers also found that patients with new-onset seizures stayed in the hospital much longer (average, 26.9 days) than any patients with a known history of epilepsy (12.8 days, P < .0001, for those who had breakthrough seizures and 10.9 days, P < .0001, for those who didn’t).

In addition, the researchers found that having any seizures – new-onset or breakthrough – was linked to higher risk of death (OR 1.41, P = .03).

Antiseizure medications are key treatments for these patients, Dr. Singh said. As for the patients with new-onset seizures who recover from COVID-19, Dr. Singh said, “it’s suspected that these people are going to have a new diagnosis of epilepsy, not just a one-time seizure.”

The findings suggest that some patients with epilepsy are protected against COVID-19-related seizures because they take antiepileptic medications that “protect the brain from getting a trigger for an abnormal signal that leads to a seizure,” he said. “That’s one possibility.”

What can neurologists learn from the study? Dr. Singh recommends a “lower threshold” to recommend or approve EEGs in patients with COVID-19 who are confused/altered when they come in, especially if this is not normal. “They may actually be having silent seizures that no one’s noticing,” he said.

No study funding was reported. The authors reported no relevant disclosures.

An analysis of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 finds that those with no history of epilepsy had more than 3 times the odds of suffering a new-onset seizure than patients with epilepsy were to have breakthrough seizures (odds radio [OR] 3.15, P < .0001), researchers reported at the annual meeting of the American Epilepsy Society.

“If you have COVID and you have a seizure, it’s more likely that you’re having it for the first time, and it’s not as likely that you have epilepsy,” study lead author Neeraj Singh, MD, a neurologist at the New York-based Northwell Health system, said in an interview. “That’s new. We don’t normally see that when someone has a bacterial or viral infection. It’s demonstrating that this infection is having direct effect on the brain and brain signals.”

According to Dr. Singh, there’s little data about seizures in patients with COVID-19 because doctors have focused on other symptoms. A 2021 multicenter study found that electrographic seizures were detected in 9.6% of 197 patients with COVID-19 who were referred for cEEG.

For the new study, Dr. Singh and a colleague tracked 917 patients with COVID-19 in the Northwell Health system who were treated from Feb. 14 to June 14, 2020, with antiepileptic medication. Of the patients, 451 had a history of epilepsy, and 466 did not.

According to Dr. Singh, 27.6% of the patients without a history of epilepsy had new-onset seizures, while 10.1% of the patients with history of epilepsy had breakthrough seizures. The difference in odds was more than threefold after adjustment. (Among all COVID-19 patients, he said, perhaps 8%-16% had seizures).

The researchers also found that patients with new-onset seizures stayed in the hospital much longer (average, 26.9 days) than any patients with a known history of epilepsy (12.8 days, P < .0001, for those who had breakthrough seizures and 10.9 days, P < .0001, for those who didn’t).

In addition, the researchers found that having any seizures – new-onset or breakthrough – was linked to higher risk of death (OR 1.41, P = .03).

Antiseizure medications are key treatments for these patients, Dr. Singh said. As for the patients with new-onset seizures who recover from COVID-19, Dr. Singh said, “it’s suspected that these people are going to have a new diagnosis of epilepsy, not just a one-time seizure.”

The findings suggest that some patients with epilepsy are protected against COVID-19-related seizures because they take antiepileptic medications that “protect the brain from getting a trigger for an abnormal signal that leads to a seizure,” he said. “That’s one possibility.”

What can neurologists learn from the study? Dr. Singh recommends a “lower threshold” to recommend or approve EEGs in patients with COVID-19 who are confused/altered when they come in, especially if this is not normal. “They may actually be having silent seizures that no one’s noticing,” he said.

No study funding was reported. The authors reported no relevant disclosures.

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Even COVID-19 can’t stop a true optimist

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Thu, 12/16/2021 - 10:15

 

Squeezing a little lemonade out of COVID-19

We like to think of ourselves as optimists here at LOTME. A glass is half full, the sky is partly sunny, and our motto is “Always look on the bright side of insanity.” Then again, our motto before that was “LOTME: Where science meets stupid,” so what do we know?

Aleutie/iStock/Getty Images

Anyway, it’s that upbeat, can-do attitude that allows us to say something positive – two somethings, actually – about the insanity that is COVID-19.

Our journey to the bright side begins, oddly enough, in the courtroom. Seems that our old friend, the face mask, is something of a lie-detector aid for juries. The authors of a recent literature review of studies on deception “found that facial expressions and other forms of nonverbal behaviour are an unreliable indicator of deceit,” according to a statement from the University of Portsmouth, where the analysis was conducted.

The one study that directly examined the role of face coverings in court proceedings showed that, “by taking away the distraction of nonverbal behaviours, observers had to rely on speech content, which turned out to be better for detecting lies,” the university said.

The second stage of our positivity trek brings us to the National Trends in Disability Employment monthly update, where we see a fourth consecutive month of gains for people with disabilities despite the larger trend of declines among those without disabilities.

Here are some numbers from the Kessler Foundation and the University of New Hampshire’s Institute on Disability to tell the story: From October to November, the employment-to-population ratio increased 4.2% for working-age people with disabilities, compared with 0.4% for people without disabilities. At the same time, the labor force participation rate rose 2.4% for working-age people with disabilities and just 0.1% for working-age people without disabilities.

Both indicators surpassed their historic highs, Andrew Houtenville, PhD, director of the Institute on Disability, said in the update. “These gains suggest that the restructuring resulting from the pandemic may be benefiting people with disabilities. Ironically, it may have taken a pandemic to shake the labor market loose for people with disabilities.”

And that is how a world-class optimist turns one gigantic lemon into lemonade.
 

Cut the cheese for better sleep

So, we’ve already talked about the TikTok lettuce tea hack that’s supposed to help us sleep better. Well, there’s another food that could have the opposite effect.

seamartini/iStock/Getty Images

According to an article from the BBC, cheese has something of a reputation. Ever since the 1960s, when a researcher noted that one patient’s nightmares stopped after he quit eating an ounce or two of cheddar each night, there’s been speculation that cheese gives you weird dreams. Another study in 2005 suggested certain types of cheese cause certain types of dreams. Blue cheese for vivid dreams and cheddar cheese for celebrity cameos.

But is there any truth to it at all?

Regardless of what we eat, going to bed hungry could cause vivid dreams, according to research by Tore Nielsen, director of the University of Montreal’s dream and nightmare lab. The 2015 study showed that high lactose could have an effect on dreams.

In that study, 17% of participants said their dreams were influenced by what they ate, but the kicker was that dairy products were the foods most reported as causing the weird dreams, the BBC noted.

“It’s likely an indirect effect in that lactose produces symptoms like gas, bloating and diarrhoea and influences dreams, as dreams draw on somatic sources like this. And if you have certain kinds of intolerances, you still may be likely to eat those foods sometimes,” Mr. Nielsen told the BBC.

There’s also the theory that it’s all in the timing of consumption. Are you the type of person to sneak a slice of cheese from the fridge late at night? (Nods.) Same.

“One reason cheese and nightmares come about is that eating later before bed is more likely to disrupt sleep, and cheese can be hard to digest,” said Charlotte Gupta, a research fellow at Central Queensland University in Australia and a coauthor of a 2020 review on how diet affects our sleep.

So as tempting as it is, maybe skip sprinkling Parmesan cheese shreds into your mouth at the open fridge before bed.
 

 

 

Teeing up against Parkinson’s

For the nearly 1 million people in the United States with Parkinson’s disease, tai chi is one of the best ways to alleviate the symptoms. The average Parkinson’s patient, however, is going to be on the older side and more likely to view the martial art as some sort of communist plot. And would you participate in a communist plot? We don’t think so.

PxHere

One group of researchers saw that patients weren’t keeping up with their therapy and decided to try a different activity, something that older people would be more likely to stick with. Something a bit more stereotypical. No, not shuffleboard. They tried golf.

“Golf is popular – the most popular sport for people over the age of 55 – which might encourage people to try it and stick with it,” study author Anne-Marie A. Wills, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, said in a Study Finds report.

In a small study, the investigators had a group of patients with Parkinson’s regularly go to a driving range for 10 weeks to hit golf balls (all expenses paid too, and that’s a big deal for golf), while another group continued with their tai chi.

At the end of the study, the 8 patients who went to the driving range had significantly better results in a Parkinson’s mobility test than those of the 12 patients in the tai chi group. In addition, the golf-group participants said they were more likely to continue with their therapy than were those who did tai chi.

Despite the small size of the study, the research team said the results certainly warrant further research. After all, the best sort of therapy is the kind that actually gets done. And golf just gets in your head. The eternal quest to add distance, to straighten out that annoying slice, to stop thinning half your chips, to make those annoying 4-footers. ... Maybe that’s just us.

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Squeezing a little lemonade out of COVID-19

We like to think of ourselves as optimists here at LOTME. A glass is half full, the sky is partly sunny, and our motto is “Always look on the bright side of insanity.” Then again, our motto before that was “LOTME: Where science meets stupid,” so what do we know?

Aleutie/iStock/Getty Images

Anyway, it’s that upbeat, can-do attitude that allows us to say something positive – two somethings, actually – about the insanity that is COVID-19.

Our journey to the bright side begins, oddly enough, in the courtroom. Seems that our old friend, the face mask, is something of a lie-detector aid for juries. The authors of a recent literature review of studies on deception “found that facial expressions and other forms of nonverbal behaviour are an unreliable indicator of deceit,” according to a statement from the University of Portsmouth, where the analysis was conducted.

The one study that directly examined the role of face coverings in court proceedings showed that, “by taking away the distraction of nonverbal behaviours, observers had to rely on speech content, which turned out to be better for detecting lies,” the university said.

The second stage of our positivity trek brings us to the National Trends in Disability Employment monthly update, where we see a fourth consecutive month of gains for people with disabilities despite the larger trend of declines among those without disabilities.

Here are some numbers from the Kessler Foundation and the University of New Hampshire’s Institute on Disability to tell the story: From October to November, the employment-to-population ratio increased 4.2% for working-age people with disabilities, compared with 0.4% for people without disabilities. At the same time, the labor force participation rate rose 2.4% for working-age people with disabilities and just 0.1% for working-age people without disabilities.

Both indicators surpassed their historic highs, Andrew Houtenville, PhD, director of the Institute on Disability, said in the update. “These gains suggest that the restructuring resulting from the pandemic may be benefiting people with disabilities. Ironically, it may have taken a pandemic to shake the labor market loose for people with disabilities.”

And that is how a world-class optimist turns one gigantic lemon into lemonade.
 

Cut the cheese for better sleep

So, we’ve already talked about the TikTok lettuce tea hack that’s supposed to help us sleep better. Well, there’s another food that could have the opposite effect.

seamartini/iStock/Getty Images

According to an article from the BBC, cheese has something of a reputation. Ever since the 1960s, when a researcher noted that one patient’s nightmares stopped after he quit eating an ounce or two of cheddar each night, there’s been speculation that cheese gives you weird dreams. Another study in 2005 suggested certain types of cheese cause certain types of dreams. Blue cheese for vivid dreams and cheddar cheese for celebrity cameos.

But is there any truth to it at all?

Regardless of what we eat, going to bed hungry could cause vivid dreams, according to research by Tore Nielsen, director of the University of Montreal’s dream and nightmare lab. The 2015 study showed that high lactose could have an effect on dreams.

In that study, 17% of participants said their dreams were influenced by what they ate, but the kicker was that dairy products were the foods most reported as causing the weird dreams, the BBC noted.

“It’s likely an indirect effect in that lactose produces symptoms like gas, bloating and diarrhoea and influences dreams, as dreams draw on somatic sources like this. And if you have certain kinds of intolerances, you still may be likely to eat those foods sometimes,” Mr. Nielsen told the BBC.

There’s also the theory that it’s all in the timing of consumption. Are you the type of person to sneak a slice of cheese from the fridge late at night? (Nods.) Same.

“One reason cheese and nightmares come about is that eating later before bed is more likely to disrupt sleep, and cheese can be hard to digest,” said Charlotte Gupta, a research fellow at Central Queensland University in Australia and a coauthor of a 2020 review on how diet affects our sleep.

So as tempting as it is, maybe skip sprinkling Parmesan cheese shreds into your mouth at the open fridge before bed.
 

 

 

Teeing up against Parkinson’s

For the nearly 1 million people in the United States with Parkinson’s disease, tai chi is one of the best ways to alleviate the symptoms. The average Parkinson’s patient, however, is going to be on the older side and more likely to view the martial art as some sort of communist plot. And would you participate in a communist plot? We don’t think so.

PxHere

One group of researchers saw that patients weren’t keeping up with their therapy and decided to try a different activity, something that older people would be more likely to stick with. Something a bit more stereotypical. No, not shuffleboard. They tried golf.

“Golf is popular – the most popular sport for people over the age of 55 – which might encourage people to try it and stick with it,” study author Anne-Marie A. Wills, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, said in a Study Finds report.

In a small study, the investigators had a group of patients with Parkinson’s regularly go to a driving range for 10 weeks to hit golf balls (all expenses paid too, and that’s a big deal for golf), while another group continued with their tai chi.

At the end of the study, the 8 patients who went to the driving range had significantly better results in a Parkinson’s mobility test than those of the 12 patients in the tai chi group. In addition, the golf-group participants said they were more likely to continue with their therapy than were those who did tai chi.

Despite the small size of the study, the research team said the results certainly warrant further research. After all, the best sort of therapy is the kind that actually gets done. And golf just gets in your head. The eternal quest to add distance, to straighten out that annoying slice, to stop thinning half your chips, to make those annoying 4-footers. ... Maybe that’s just us.

 

Squeezing a little lemonade out of COVID-19

We like to think of ourselves as optimists here at LOTME. A glass is half full, the sky is partly sunny, and our motto is “Always look on the bright side of insanity.” Then again, our motto before that was “LOTME: Where science meets stupid,” so what do we know?

Aleutie/iStock/Getty Images

Anyway, it’s that upbeat, can-do attitude that allows us to say something positive – two somethings, actually – about the insanity that is COVID-19.

Our journey to the bright side begins, oddly enough, in the courtroom. Seems that our old friend, the face mask, is something of a lie-detector aid for juries. The authors of a recent literature review of studies on deception “found that facial expressions and other forms of nonverbal behaviour are an unreliable indicator of deceit,” according to a statement from the University of Portsmouth, where the analysis was conducted.

The one study that directly examined the role of face coverings in court proceedings showed that, “by taking away the distraction of nonverbal behaviours, observers had to rely on speech content, which turned out to be better for detecting lies,” the university said.

The second stage of our positivity trek brings us to the National Trends in Disability Employment monthly update, where we see a fourth consecutive month of gains for people with disabilities despite the larger trend of declines among those without disabilities.

Here are some numbers from the Kessler Foundation and the University of New Hampshire’s Institute on Disability to tell the story: From October to November, the employment-to-population ratio increased 4.2% for working-age people with disabilities, compared with 0.4% for people without disabilities. At the same time, the labor force participation rate rose 2.4% for working-age people with disabilities and just 0.1% for working-age people without disabilities.

Both indicators surpassed their historic highs, Andrew Houtenville, PhD, director of the Institute on Disability, said in the update. “These gains suggest that the restructuring resulting from the pandemic may be benefiting people with disabilities. Ironically, it may have taken a pandemic to shake the labor market loose for people with disabilities.”

And that is how a world-class optimist turns one gigantic lemon into lemonade.
 

Cut the cheese for better sleep

So, we’ve already talked about the TikTok lettuce tea hack that’s supposed to help us sleep better. Well, there’s another food that could have the opposite effect.

seamartini/iStock/Getty Images

According to an article from the BBC, cheese has something of a reputation. Ever since the 1960s, when a researcher noted that one patient’s nightmares stopped after he quit eating an ounce or two of cheddar each night, there’s been speculation that cheese gives you weird dreams. Another study in 2005 suggested certain types of cheese cause certain types of dreams. Blue cheese for vivid dreams and cheddar cheese for celebrity cameos.

But is there any truth to it at all?

Regardless of what we eat, going to bed hungry could cause vivid dreams, according to research by Tore Nielsen, director of the University of Montreal’s dream and nightmare lab. The 2015 study showed that high lactose could have an effect on dreams.

In that study, 17% of participants said their dreams were influenced by what they ate, but the kicker was that dairy products were the foods most reported as causing the weird dreams, the BBC noted.

“It’s likely an indirect effect in that lactose produces symptoms like gas, bloating and diarrhoea and influences dreams, as dreams draw on somatic sources like this. And if you have certain kinds of intolerances, you still may be likely to eat those foods sometimes,” Mr. Nielsen told the BBC.

There’s also the theory that it’s all in the timing of consumption. Are you the type of person to sneak a slice of cheese from the fridge late at night? (Nods.) Same.

“One reason cheese and nightmares come about is that eating later before bed is more likely to disrupt sleep, and cheese can be hard to digest,” said Charlotte Gupta, a research fellow at Central Queensland University in Australia and a coauthor of a 2020 review on how diet affects our sleep.

So as tempting as it is, maybe skip sprinkling Parmesan cheese shreds into your mouth at the open fridge before bed.
 

 

 

Teeing up against Parkinson’s

For the nearly 1 million people in the United States with Parkinson’s disease, tai chi is one of the best ways to alleviate the symptoms. The average Parkinson’s patient, however, is going to be on the older side and more likely to view the martial art as some sort of communist plot. And would you participate in a communist plot? We don’t think so.

PxHere

One group of researchers saw that patients weren’t keeping up with their therapy and decided to try a different activity, something that older people would be more likely to stick with. Something a bit more stereotypical. No, not shuffleboard. They tried golf.

“Golf is popular – the most popular sport for people over the age of 55 – which might encourage people to try it and stick with it,” study author Anne-Marie A. Wills, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, said in a Study Finds report.

In a small study, the investigators had a group of patients with Parkinson’s regularly go to a driving range for 10 weeks to hit golf balls (all expenses paid too, and that’s a big deal for golf), while another group continued with their tai chi.

At the end of the study, the 8 patients who went to the driving range had significantly better results in a Parkinson’s mobility test than those of the 12 patients in the tai chi group. In addition, the golf-group participants said they were more likely to continue with their therapy than were those who did tai chi.

Despite the small size of the study, the research team said the results certainly warrant further research. After all, the best sort of therapy is the kind that actually gets done. And golf just gets in your head. The eternal quest to add distance, to straighten out that annoying slice, to stop thinning half your chips, to make those annoying 4-footers. ... Maybe that’s just us.

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Ferric carboxymaltose calms restless legs

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 11/23/2021 - 09:34

Treatment with intravenous ferric carboxymaltose significantly improved symptoms in restless legs syndrome (RLS) patients with iron-deficiency anemia (IDA), data from 29 adults show.

RLS occurs among individuals with normal iron but is at least six times higher among individuals with IDA, Hyoeun Bae, MD, of Keimyung University, Daegu, South Korea, and colleagues wrote. Previous studies have explored iron treatments for RLS patients with IDA, however, guidelines for treatment have not yet been published.

In a study published in Sleep Medicine, the researchers randomized 29 RLS patients with IDA to either 1,500 mg IV ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) or placebo for a short-term period of 6 weeks, followed by a phase 2 study for responders that lasted for 52 weeks. Baseline characteristics, including age, gender, iron parameters, and sleep and mood scales were similar between the groups.

At 6 weeks, patients in the FCM group showed significant improvement in RLS symptom severity based on changes from baseline International Restless Legs Syndrome Study Group scale (IRLS) scores, compared with placebo patients (–13.47 vs. 1.36, P < .001). A secondary outcome of sleep quality also improved significantly in the FCM group, compared with the placebo group.

After 6 weeks, 11 of the 14 patients in the placebo group also received 1,500 mg FCM for an open-label study. These patients also showed significant improvement in IRLS scores from baseline to 6 weeks.

All 23 responders from the short-term studies (13 who received FCM initially and 10 from the postplacebo group) enrolled in a phase 2 long-term study that lasted for 52 weeks; 14 of these completed the full 52-week study period.

Overall, 61% of participants in phase 2 of the study remained off their RLS medications at 52 weeks, and no serious adverse events were reported during the study period. Of these, 10 received one additional dose of FCM and 4 received more than one additional dose. The median change in IRLS score at 4 weeks after treatment was –4.00, compared with the score prior to treatment.

The study is the first of its design to show benefits of intravenous iron therapy for RLS in patients with IDA, the researchers said, noting that the findings of improved, but not cured, RLS symptoms might suggest that more than 1,500 mg of iron is needed to fully treat RLS in this patient population. “A second interpretation is that the RLS and IDA were separate events: a patient with idiopathic RLS who subsequently developed anemia,” they said. “Treating the IDA might improve symptoms but may not eliminate the symptoms.”

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the relatively small study population and inability to know the time frame for the development of IDA, the researchers noted. However, the results support the use of intravenous iron therapy for relief of RLS in IDA patients.

“Since IDA could result in epigenetic changes leading to irreversible state of RLS, then urgent and adequate management of the IDA in RLS patients would seem a very prudent and important clinical approach to this specific clinical condition,” they concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no disclosures.

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Treatment with intravenous ferric carboxymaltose significantly improved symptoms in restless legs syndrome (RLS) patients with iron-deficiency anemia (IDA), data from 29 adults show.

RLS occurs among individuals with normal iron but is at least six times higher among individuals with IDA, Hyoeun Bae, MD, of Keimyung University, Daegu, South Korea, and colleagues wrote. Previous studies have explored iron treatments for RLS patients with IDA, however, guidelines for treatment have not yet been published.

In a study published in Sleep Medicine, the researchers randomized 29 RLS patients with IDA to either 1,500 mg IV ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) or placebo for a short-term period of 6 weeks, followed by a phase 2 study for responders that lasted for 52 weeks. Baseline characteristics, including age, gender, iron parameters, and sleep and mood scales were similar between the groups.

At 6 weeks, patients in the FCM group showed significant improvement in RLS symptom severity based on changes from baseline International Restless Legs Syndrome Study Group scale (IRLS) scores, compared with placebo patients (–13.47 vs. 1.36, P < .001). A secondary outcome of sleep quality also improved significantly in the FCM group, compared with the placebo group.

After 6 weeks, 11 of the 14 patients in the placebo group also received 1,500 mg FCM for an open-label study. These patients also showed significant improvement in IRLS scores from baseline to 6 weeks.

All 23 responders from the short-term studies (13 who received FCM initially and 10 from the postplacebo group) enrolled in a phase 2 long-term study that lasted for 52 weeks; 14 of these completed the full 52-week study period.

Overall, 61% of participants in phase 2 of the study remained off their RLS medications at 52 weeks, and no serious adverse events were reported during the study period. Of these, 10 received one additional dose of FCM and 4 received more than one additional dose. The median change in IRLS score at 4 weeks after treatment was –4.00, compared with the score prior to treatment.

The study is the first of its design to show benefits of intravenous iron therapy for RLS in patients with IDA, the researchers said, noting that the findings of improved, but not cured, RLS symptoms might suggest that more than 1,500 mg of iron is needed to fully treat RLS in this patient population. “A second interpretation is that the RLS and IDA were separate events: a patient with idiopathic RLS who subsequently developed anemia,” they said. “Treating the IDA might improve symptoms but may not eliminate the symptoms.”

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the relatively small study population and inability to know the time frame for the development of IDA, the researchers noted. However, the results support the use of intravenous iron therapy for relief of RLS in IDA patients.

“Since IDA could result in epigenetic changes leading to irreversible state of RLS, then urgent and adequate management of the IDA in RLS patients would seem a very prudent and important clinical approach to this specific clinical condition,” they concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no disclosures.

Treatment with intravenous ferric carboxymaltose significantly improved symptoms in restless legs syndrome (RLS) patients with iron-deficiency anemia (IDA), data from 29 adults show.

RLS occurs among individuals with normal iron but is at least six times higher among individuals with IDA, Hyoeun Bae, MD, of Keimyung University, Daegu, South Korea, and colleagues wrote. Previous studies have explored iron treatments for RLS patients with IDA, however, guidelines for treatment have not yet been published.

In a study published in Sleep Medicine, the researchers randomized 29 RLS patients with IDA to either 1,500 mg IV ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) or placebo for a short-term period of 6 weeks, followed by a phase 2 study for responders that lasted for 52 weeks. Baseline characteristics, including age, gender, iron parameters, and sleep and mood scales were similar between the groups.

At 6 weeks, patients in the FCM group showed significant improvement in RLS symptom severity based on changes from baseline International Restless Legs Syndrome Study Group scale (IRLS) scores, compared with placebo patients (–13.47 vs. 1.36, P < .001). A secondary outcome of sleep quality also improved significantly in the FCM group, compared with the placebo group.

After 6 weeks, 11 of the 14 patients in the placebo group also received 1,500 mg FCM for an open-label study. These patients also showed significant improvement in IRLS scores from baseline to 6 weeks.

All 23 responders from the short-term studies (13 who received FCM initially and 10 from the postplacebo group) enrolled in a phase 2 long-term study that lasted for 52 weeks; 14 of these completed the full 52-week study period.

Overall, 61% of participants in phase 2 of the study remained off their RLS medications at 52 weeks, and no serious adverse events were reported during the study period. Of these, 10 received one additional dose of FCM and 4 received more than one additional dose. The median change in IRLS score at 4 weeks after treatment was –4.00, compared with the score prior to treatment.

The study is the first of its design to show benefits of intravenous iron therapy for RLS in patients with IDA, the researchers said, noting that the findings of improved, but not cured, RLS symptoms might suggest that more than 1,500 mg of iron is needed to fully treat RLS in this patient population. “A second interpretation is that the RLS and IDA were separate events: a patient with idiopathic RLS who subsequently developed anemia,” they said. “Treating the IDA might improve symptoms but may not eliminate the symptoms.”

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the relatively small study population and inability to know the time frame for the development of IDA, the researchers noted. However, the results support the use of intravenous iron therapy for relief of RLS in IDA patients.

“Since IDA could result in epigenetic changes leading to irreversible state of RLS, then urgent and adequate management of the IDA in RLS patients would seem a very prudent and important clinical approach to this specific clinical condition,” they concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no disclosures.

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Transdermal patches ease extrapyramidal symptoms in schizophrenia

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Mon, 11/22/2021 - 14:37

Use of a transdermal blonanserin patch significantly improved extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS), compared with oral blonanserin tablets in patients with schizophrenia, according to results of an open-label study of 155 adults.

Blonanserin, a second-generation antipsychotic, has been shown to reduce extrapyramidal symptoms when used to treat schizophrenia, but the impact of switching to a patch on extrapyramidal symptoms and on the use of antiparkinson drugs has not been well studied, Kazutaka Ohi, MD, of Gifu University Graduate School of Medicine, Seki, Japan, and colleagues wrote. Advantages of the patch include the ability to provide stable blood concentrations and the ability to be concealed under clothing to avoid patients’ embarrassment at taking oral medications.

In a study published in Progress in Neuropsychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry, the researchers identified 155 adults aged 18 years and older diagnosed with schizophrenia who were treated at 37 medical institutions in Japan between February 2015 and May 2017.

The first cohort of 97 patients received blonanserin tablets (8-16 mg/day) for 6 weeks, followed by blonanserin transdermal patches (40-80 mg/day) once daily for 1 year. The second cohort of 58 patients received continuous blonanserin patch therapy. Extrapyramidal symptoms were assessed using the Drug-Induced Extrapyramidal Symptoms Scale (DIEPSS); individual scores ranged from a 0 for normal to a 4 for severe.

Overall, DIEPSS scores decreased significantly in both cohorts after switching from blonanserin tablets or powders to transdermal patches. The average DIEPSS change from baseline at 3, 6, and 12 months was –0.44, –0.07, and –0.14, respectively, in cohort 1, and –0.16, –0.74, and –0.81, respectively, in cohort 2.

The researchers also assessed the impact of transition to transdermal patches on the use of antiparkinsonism drugs using the biperiden equivalents of total antiparkinsonian drugs (BPD-eq) measure. At baseline, about 22% of patients used concomitant antiparkinsonism drugs, compared with 25.8% at 1 year after starting patch treatment. The dose of antiparkinson drugs was not significantly decreased after switching to transdermal patches, in part because of psychiatrists’ prescribing behaviors, Dr. Ohi and colleagues noted.

As a secondary outcome, the researchers examined psychotic symptoms and found that Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) negative symptom scores decreased significantly in patients in cohort 1 who switched from tablets or powders to patches. Changes in scores from baseline to 3, 6, and 12 months were –0.7, –1.0, and –1.3, respectively. Positive PANSS scores did not change significantly in cohort 1. In cohort 2, both positive and negative PANSS scores decreased significantly over 12 months after switching from blonanserin tablets/powders to patches. The mean changes in scores from baseline to 3, 6, and 12 months were –1.6, –2.3, and –2.4, respectively, for PANSS positive symptom scores, and –1.4, –2.7, and –2.8, respectively, for negative symptom scores.

A total of 41.2% of cohort 1 patients and 44.8% of cohort 2 patients discontinued patch treatments by 1 year. Four patients discontinued the patch because of EPS during the treatment period in cohort 1; no patients in cohort 2 discontinued because of EPS.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the open-label design and lack of controls; also, the study did not examine crossover changes in patients who switched from tablets or powders to patches, the researchers noted.

However, the results indicate that direct switching from blonanserin tablets or powders to transdermal patches reduced EPS and psychotic symptoms in schizophrenia and may be more acceptable to patients, compared with oral medications, as well as more effective, they concluded.

The study received no outside funding, and Dr. Ohi and colleagues had no disclosures.

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Use of a transdermal blonanserin patch significantly improved extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS), compared with oral blonanserin tablets in patients with schizophrenia, according to results of an open-label study of 155 adults.

Blonanserin, a second-generation antipsychotic, has been shown to reduce extrapyramidal symptoms when used to treat schizophrenia, but the impact of switching to a patch on extrapyramidal symptoms and on the use of antiparkinson drugs has not been well studied, Kazutaka Ohi, MD, of Gifu University Graduate School of Medicine, Seki, Japan, and colleagues wrote. Advantages of the patch include the ability to provide stable blood concentrations and the ability to be concealed under clothing to avoid patients’ embarrassment at taking oral medications.

In a study published in Progress in Neuropsychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry, the researchers identified 155 adults aged 18 years and older diagnosed with schizophrenia who were treated at 37 medical institutions in Japan between February 2015 and May 2017.

The first cohort of 97 patients received blonanserin tablets (8-16 mg/day) for 6 weeks, followed by blonanserin transdermal patches (40-80 mg/day) once daily for 1 year. The second cohort of 58 patients received continuous blonanserin patch therapy. Extrapyramidal symptoms were assessed using the Drug-Induced Extrapyramidal Symptoms Scale (DIEPSS); individual scores ranged from a 0 for normal to a 4 for severe.

Overall, DIEPSS scores decreased significantly in both cohorts after switching from blonanserin tablets or powders to transdermal patches. The average DIEPSS change from baseline at 3, 6, and 12 months was –0.44, –0.07, and –0.14, respectively, in cohort 1, and –0.16, –0.74, and –0.81, respectively, in cohort 2.

The researchers also assessed the impact of transition to transdermal patches on the use of antiparkinsonism drugs using the biperiden equivalents of total antiparkinsonian drugs (BPD-eq) measure. At baseline, about 22% of patients used concomitant antiparkinsonism drugs, compared with 25.8% at 1 year after starting patch treatment. The dose of antiparkinson drugs was not significantly decreased after switching to transdermal patches, in part because of psychiatrists’ prescribing behaviors, Dr. Ohi and colleagues noted.

As a secondary outcome, the researchers examined psychotic symptoms and found that Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) negative symptom scores decreased significantly in patients in cohort 1 who switched from tablets or powders to patches. Changes in scores from baseline to 3, 6, and 12 months were –0.7, –1.0, and –1.3, respectively. Positive PANSS scores did not change significantly in cohort 1. In cohort 2, both positive and negative PANSS scores decreased significantly over 12 months after switching from blonanserin tablets/powders to patches. The mean changes in scores from baseline to 3, 6, and 12 months were –1.6, –2.3, and –2.4, respectively, for PANSS positive symptom scores, and –1.4, –2.7, and –2.8, respectively, for negative symptom scores.

A total of 41.2% of cohort 1 patients and 44.8% of cohort 2 patients discontinued patch treatments by 1 year. Four patients discontinued the patch because of EPS during the treatment period in cohort 1; no patients in cohort 2 discontinued because of EPS.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the open-label design and lack of controls; also, the study did not examine crossover changes in patients who switched from tablets or powders to patches, the researchers noted.

However, the results indicate that direct switching from blonanserin tablets or powders to transdermal patches reduced EPS and psychotic symptoms in schizophrenia and may be more acceptable to patients, compared with oral medications, as well as more effective, they concluded.

The study received no outside funding, and Dr. Ohi and colleagues had no disclosures.

Use of a transdermal blonanserin patch significantly improved extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS), compared with oral blonanserin tablets in patients with schizophrenia, according to results of an open-label study of 155 adults.

Blonanserin, a second-generation antipsychotic, has been shown to reduce extrapyramidal symptoms when used to treat schizophrenia, but the impact of switching to a patch on extrapyramidal symptoms and on the use of antiparkinson drugs has not been well studied, Kazutaka Ohi, MD, of Gifu University Graduate School of Medicine, Seki, Japan, and colleagues wrote. Advantages of the patch include the ability to provide stable blood concentrations and the ability to be concealed under clothing to avoid patients’ embarrassment at taking oral medications.

In a study published in Progress in Neuropsychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry, the researchers identified 155 adults aged 18 years and older diagnosed with schizophrenia who were treated at 37 medical institutions in Japan between February 2015 and May 2017.

The first cohort of 97 patients received blonanserin tablets (8-16 mg/day) for 6 weeks, followed by blonanserin transdermal patches (40-80 mg/day) once daily for 1 year. The second cohort of 58 patients received continuous blonanserin patch therapy. Extrapyramidal symptoms were assessed using the Drug-Induced Extrapyramidal Symptoms Scale (DIEPSS); individual scores ranged from a 0 for normal to a 4 for severe.

Overall, DIEPSS scores decreased significantly in both cohorts after switching from blonanserin tablets or powders to transdermal patches. The average DIEPSS change from baseline at 3, 6, and 12 months was –0.44, –0.07, and –0.14, respectively, in cohort 1, and –0.16, –0.74, and –0.81, respectively, in cohort 2.

The researchers also assessed the impact of transition to transdermal patches on the use of antiparkinsonism drugs using the biperiden equivalents of total antiparkinsonian drugs (BPD-eq) measure. At baseline, about 22% of patients used concomitant antiparkinsonism drugs, compared with 25.8% at 1 year after starting patch treatment. The dose of antiparkinson drugs was not significantly decreased after switching to transdermal patches, in part because of psychiatrists’ prescribing behaviors, Dr. Ohi and colleagues noted.

As a secondary outcome, the researchers examined psychotic symptoms and found that Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) negative symptom scores decreased significantly in patients in cohort 1 who switched from tablets or powders to patches. Changes in scores from baseline to 3, 6, and 12 months were –0.7, –1.0, and –1.3, respectively. Positive PANSS scores did not change significantly in cohort 1. In cohort 2, both positive and negative PANSS scores decreased significantly over 12 months after switching from blonanserin tablets/powders to patches. The mean changes in scores from baseline to 3, 6, and 12 months were –1.6, –2.3, and –2.4, respectively, for PANSS positive symptom scores, and –1.4, –2.7, and –2.8, respectively, for negative symptom scores.

A total of 41.2% of cohort 1 patients and 44.8% of cohort 2 patients discontinued patch treatments by 1 year. Four patients discontinued the patch because of EPS during the treatment period in cohort 1; no patients in cohort 2 discontinued because of EPS.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the open-label design and lack of controls; also, the study did not examine crossover changes in patients who switched from tablets or powders to patches, the researchers noted.

However, the results indicate that direct switching from blonanserin tablets or powders to transdermal patches reduced EPS and psychotic symptoms in schizophrenia and may be more acceptable to patients, compared with oral medications, as well as more effective, they concluded.

The study received no outside funding, and Dr. Ohi and colleagues had no disclosures.

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Parkinson’s death rate rising, reasons unclear

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Thu, 12/15/2022 - 15:40

The death rate from Parkinson’s disease has increased by about 63% over the past 2 decades in the United States, according to what investigators say is the most comprehensive study in the nation of temporal trends in Parkinson’s disease mortality.

Dr. Wei Bao

“The reason behind the rising death rates from Parkinson’s disease is not clear at present and warrants further investigation,” Wei Bao, MD, PhD, associate professor in the department of epidemiology at the University of Iowa College of Public Health, in Iowa City, said in an interview. “We know that people are living longer and the general population is getting older, but that doesn’t fully explain the increase we saw in the death rate in people with Parkinson’s disease,” Dr. Bao added in a statement.

“Understanding why more people are dying from this disease is critical if we are going to reverse the trend,” Dr. Bao said.

The study was published online Oct. 27 in Neurology.



Long-term data

The researchers used data from the National Vital Statistics System to determine national trends in Parkinson’s disease mortality overall and in several key subgroups. The analyses included 479,059 people who died of Parkinson’s disease between 1999 and 2019.

Over the 21-year period, the age-adjusted mortality from Parkinson’s disease rose from 5.4 per 100,000 in 1999 to 8.8 per 100,000 in 2019. The average annual percent change (APC) was 2.4% for the entire period.

During the study period, the number of deaths from Parkinson’s disease more than doubled, from 14,593 to 35,311.

The death rate from Parkinson’s disease increased significantly across all age groups. The average APC was 5.0% among adults younger than 65 years, 1.9% among those aged 65-74 years, 2.2% among those 75-84 years, and 2.7% among those 85 and older.

The death rate increased in both men and women, but age-adjusted Parkinson’s disease mortality was twice as high in men as in women. The researchers say one possible explanation for the sex difference is estrogen, which leads to higher dopamine levels in areas of the brain that control motor responses and may protect women from Parkinson’s disease.

The study also showed that White people are more likely to die from Parkinson’s disease than persons of other racial and ethnic groups. In 2019, the death rate per 100,000 was 9.7 for Whites, 6.5 for Hispanics, and 4.7 for non-Hispanic Blacks.

Previous studies have shown that compared with White people, Black and Hispanic people are less likely to see a neurologist, owing to socioeconomic barriers. This suggests that White people may be more likely to receive a Parkinson’s disease diagnosis, the researchers noted.

“It’s important to continue to evaluate long-term trends in Parkinson’s death rates,” Dr. Bao said.

“This can inform future research that may help pinpoint why more people are dying of the disease. Also, updating vital statistics about Parkinson’s death rates may be used for priority setting and financing of health care and policy,” Dr. Bao added.
 

 

 

1.2 million patients by 2030

Reached for comment, James Beck, PhD, chief scientific officer for the Parkinson’s Foundation, said these findings are not surprising. “They are aligned with the work the Parkinson’s Foundation has done to show that the number of people with Parkinson’s disease has increased over time. We are working on an improved estimate of Parkinson’s disease incidence and predict that Parkinson’s disease will continue to rise as the population ages, so an increase in mortality rates would be expected,” Dr. Beck said.

He noted that much of the public health statistics regarding Parkinson’s disease are outdated and that the Parkinson’s Foundation has been partnering with others to update them.

“For instance, to calculate an accurate estimate of the prevalence of Parkinson’s disease, the Parkinson’s Foundation Prevalence Project was formed. The findings from this group demonstrated that the number of people living with Parkinson’s disease will rise to nearly 1.2 million by 2030, a substantial increase from the estimate of 930,000 for 2020,” Dr. Beck said.

“The overarching message is that more people are being diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, not that more people are dying from the disease,” he added.

“Over the last 20 years, our understanding of Parkinson’s disease has changed and developed, so clinicians are more aware and better able to properly diagnose Parkinson’s disease. This could mean that the cause is likely due to an increase in diagnosis rates and better recognition of Parkinson’s disease, which would lead to higher rates of identifying Parkinson’s disease as a cause of death,” said Dr. Beck.

The study had no targeted funding. Dr. Bao and Dr. Beck have indicated no relevant financial relationships.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The death rate from Parkinson’s disease has increased by about 63% over the past 2 decades in the United States, according to what investigators say is the most comprehensive study in the nation of temporal trends in Parkinson’s disease mortality.

Dr. Wei Bao

“The reason behind the rising death rates from Parkinson’s disease is not clear at present and warrants further investigation,” Wei Bao, MD, PhD, associate professor in the department of epidemiology at the University of Iowa College of Public Health, in Iowa City, said in an interview. “We know that people are living longer and the general population is getting older, but that doesn’t fully explain the increase we saw in the death rate in people with Parkinson’s disease,” Dr. Bao added in a statement.

“Understanding why more people are dying from this disease is critical if we are going to reverse the trend,” Dr. Bao said.

The study was published online Oct. 27 in Neurology.



Long-term data

The researchers used data from the National Vital Statistics System to determine national trends in Parkinson’s disease mortality overall and in several key subgroups. The analyses included 479,059 people who died of Parkinson’s disease between 1999 and 2019.

Over the 21-year period, the age-adjusted mortality from Parkinson’s disease rose from 5.4 per 100,000 in 1999 to 8.8 per 100,000 in 2019. The average annual percent change (APC) was 2.4% for the entire period.

During the study period, the number of deaths from Parkinson’s disease more than doubled, from 14,593 to 35,311.

The death rate from Parkinson’s disease increased significantly across all age groups. The average APC was 5.0% among adults younger than 65 years, 1.9% among those aged 65-74 years, 2.2% among those 75-84 years, and 2.7% among those 85 and older.

The death rate increased in both men and women, but age-adjusted Parkinson’s disease mortality was twice as high in men as in women. The researchers say one possible explanation for the sex difference is estrogen, which leads to higher dopamine levels in areas of the brain that control motor responses and may protect women from Parkinson’s disease.

The study also showed that White people are more likely to die from Parkinson’s disease than persons of other racial and ethnic groups. In 2019, the death rate per 100,000 was 9.7 for Whites, 6.5 for Hispanics, and 4.7 for non-Hispanic Blacks.

Previous studies have shown that compared with White people, Black and Hispanic people are less likely to see a neurologist, owing to socioeconomic barriers. This suggests that White people may be more likely to receive a Parkinson’s disease diagnosis, the researchers noted.

“It’s important to continue to evaluate long-term trends in Parkinson’s death rates,” Dr. Bao said.

“This can inform future research that may help pinpoint why more people are dying of the disease. Also, updating vital statistics about Parkinson’s death rates may be used for priority setting and financing of health care and policy,” Dr. Bao added.
 

 

 

1.2 million patients by 2030

Reached for comment, James Beck, PhD, chief scientific officer for the Parkinson’s Foundation, said these findings are not surprising. “They are aligned with the work the Parkinson’s Foundation has done to show that the number of people with Parkinson’s disease has increased over time. We are working on an improved estimate of Parkinson’s disease incidence and predict that Parkinson’s disease will continue to rise as the population ages, so an increase in mortality rates would be expected,” Dr. Beck said.

He noted that much of the public health statistics regarding Parkinson’s disease are outdated and that the Parkinson’s Foundation has been partnering with others to update them.

“For instance, to calculate an accurate estimate of the prevalence of Parkinson’s disease, the Parkinson’s Foundation Prevalence Project was formed. The findings from this group demonstrated that the number of people living with Parkinson’s disease will rise to nearly 1.2 million by 2030, a substantial increase from the estimate of 930,000 for 2020,” Dr. Beck said.

“The overarching message is that more people are being diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, not that more people are dying from the disease,” he added.

“Over the last 20 years, our understanding of Parkinson’s disease has changed and developed, so clinicians are more aware and better able to properly diagnose Parkinson’s disease. This could mean that the cause is likely due to an increase in diagnosis rates and better recognition of Parkinson’s disease, which would lead to higher rates of identifying Parkinson’s disease as a cause of death,” said Dr. Beck.

The study had no targeted funding. Dr. Bao and Dr. Beck have indicated no relevant financial relationships.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

The death rate from Parkinson’s disease has increased by about 63% over the past 2 decades in the United States, according to what investigators say is the most comprehensive study in the nation of temporal trends in Parkinson’s disease mortality.

Dr. Wei Bao

“The reason behind the rising death rates from Parkinson’s disease is not clear at present and warrants further investigation,” Wei Bao, MD, PhD, associate professor in the department of epidemiology at the University of Iowa College of Public Health, in Iowa City, said in an interview. “We know that people are living longer and the general population is getting older, but that doesn’t fully explain the increase we saw in the death rate in people with Parkinson’s disease,” Dr. Bao added in a statement.

“Understanding why more people are dying from this disease is critical if we are going to reverse the trend,” Dr. Bao said.

The study was published online Oct. 27 in Neurology.



Long-term data

The researchers used data from the National Vital Statistics System to determine national trends in Parkinson’s disease mortality overall and in several key subgroups. The analyses included 479,059 people who died of Parkinson’s disease between 1999 and 2019.

Over the 21-year period, the age-adjusted mortality from Parkinson’s disease rose from 5.4 per 100,000 in 1999 to 8.8 per 100,000 in 2019. The average annual percent change (APC) was 2.4% for the entire period.

During the study period, the number of deaths from Parkinson’s disease more than doubled, from 14,593 to 35,311.

The death rate from Parkinson’s disease increased significantly across all age groups. The average APC was 5.0% among adults younger than 65 years, 1.9% among those aged 65-74 years, 2.2% among those 75-84 years, and 2.7% among those 85 and older.

The death rate increased in both men and women, but age-adjusted Parkinson’s disease mortality was twice as high in men as in women. The researchers say one possible explanation for the sex difference is estrogen, which leads to higher dopamine levels in areas of the brain that control motor responses and may protect women from Parkinson’s disease.

The study also showed that White people are more likely to die from Parkinson’s disease than persons of other racial and ethnic groups. In 2019, the death rate per 100,000 was 9.7 for Whites, 6.5 for Hispanics, and 4.7 for non-Hispanic Blacks.

Previous studies have shown that compared with White people, Black and Hispanic people are less likely to see a neurologist, owing to socioeconomic barriers. This suggests that White people may be more likely to receive a Parkinson’s disease diagnosis, the researchers noted.

“It’s important to continue to evaluate long-term trends in Parkinson’s death rates,” Dr. Bao said.

“This can inform future research that may help pinpoint why more people are dying of the disease. Also, updating vital statistics about Parkinson’s death rates may be used for priority setting and financing of health care and policy,” Dr. Bao added.
 

 

 

1.2 million patients by 2030

Reached for comment, James Beck, PhD, chief scientific officer for the Parkinson’s Foundation, said these findings are not surprising. “They are aligned with the work the Parkinson’s Foundation has done to show that the number of people with Parkinson’s disease has increased over time. We are working on an improved estimate of Parkinson’s disease incidence and predict that Parkinson’s disease will continue to rise as the population ages, so an increase in mortality rates would be expected,” Dr. Beck said.

He noted that much of the public health statistics regarding Parkinson’s disease are outdated and that the Parkinson’s Foundation has been partnering with others to update them.

“For instance, to calculate an accurate estimate of the prevalence of Parkinson’s disease, the Parkinson’s Foundation Prevalence Project was formed. The findings from this group demonstrated that the number of people living with Parkinson’s disease will rise to nearly 1.2 million by 2030, a substantial increase from the estimate of 930,000 for 2020,” Dr. Beck said.

“The overarching message is that more people are being diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, not that more people are dying from the disease,” he added.

“Over the last 20 years, our understanding of Parkinson’s disease has changed and developed, so clinicians are more aware and better able to properly diagnose Parkinson’s disease. This could mean that the cause is likely due to an increase in diagnosis rates and better recognition of Parkinson’s disease, which would lead to higher rates of identifying Parkinson’s disease as a cause of death,” said Dr. Beck.

The study had no targeted funding. Dr. Bao and Dr. Beck have indicated no relevant financial relationships.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Influenza tied to long-term increased risk for Parkinson’s disease

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Thu, 12/15/2022 - 15:40

Influenza infection is linked to a subsequent diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease (PD) more than 10 years later, resurfacing a long-held debate about whether infection increases the risk for movement disorders over the long term.

In a large case-control study, investigators found the odds of PD were elevated by approximately 90% for PD that occurred more than 15 years after influenza infection and by more than 70% for PD occurring more than 10 years after the flu.

“This study is not definitive by any means, but it certainly suggests there are potential long-term consequences from influenza,” study investigator Noelle M. Cocoros, DSc, research scientist at Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute and Harvard Medical School, Boston, said in an interview.

The study was published online Oct. 25 in JAMA Neurology.

Ongoing debate

The debate about whether influenza is associated with PD has been going on as far back as the 1918 influenza pandemic, when experts documented parkinsonism in affected individuals.

Using data from the Danish patient registry, researchers identified 10,271 subjects diagnosed with PD during a 17-year period (2000-2016). Of these, 38.7% were female, and the mean age was 71.4 years.

They matched these subjects for age and sex to 51,355 controls without PD. Compared with controls, slightly fewer individuals with PD had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or emphysema, but there was a similar distribution of cardiovascular disease and various other conditions.

Researchers collected data on influenza diagnoses from inpatient and outpatient hospital clinics from 1977 to 2016. They plotted these by month and year on a graph, calculated the median number of diagnoses per month, and identified peaks as those with more than threefold the median.

They categorized cases in groups related to the time between the infection and PD: More than 10 years, 10-15 years, and more than 15 years.

The time lapse accounts for a rather long “run-up” to PD, said Dr. Cocoros. There’s a sometimes decades-long preclinical phase before patients develop typical motor signs and a prodromal phase where they may present with nonmotor symptoms such as sleep disorders and constipation.

“We expected there would be at least 10 years between any infection and PD if there was an association present,” said Dr. Cocoros.

Investigators found an association between influenza exposure and PD diagnosis “that held up over time,” she said.

For more than 10 years before PD, the likelihood of a diagnosis for the infected compared with the unexposed was increased 73% (odds ratio [OR] 1.73; 95% confidence interval, 1.11-2.71; P = .02) after adjustment for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, emphysema, lung cancer, Crohn’s disease, and ulcerative colitis.

The odds increased with more time from infection. For more than 15 years, the adjusted OR was 1.91 (95% CI, 1.14 - 3.19; P =.01).

However, for the 10- to 15-year time frame, the point estimate was reduced and the CI nonsignificant (OR, 1.33; 95% CI, 0.54-3.27; P = .53). This “is a little hard to interpret,” but could be a result of the small numbers, exposure misclassification, or because “the longer time interval is what’s meaningful,” said Dr. Cocoros.
 

 

 

Potential COVID-19–related PD surge?

In a sensitivity analysis, researchers looked at peak infection activity. “We wanted to increase the likelihood of these diagnoses representing actual infection,” Dr. Cocoros noted.

Here, the OR was still elevated at more than 10 years, but the CI was quite wide and included 1 (OR, 1.52; 95% CI, 0.80-2.89; P = .21). “So the association holds up, but the estimates are quite unstable,” said Dr. Cocoros.

Researchers examined associations with numerous other infection types, but did not see the same trend over time. Some infections – for example, gastrointestinal infections and septicemia – were associated with PD within 5 years, but most associations appeared to be null after more than 10 years.

“There seemed to be associations earlier between the infection and PD, which we interpret to suggest there’s actually not a meaningful association,” said Dr. Cocoros.

An exception might be urinary tract infections (UTIs), where after 10 years, the adjusted OR was 1.19 (95% CI, 1.01-1.40). Research suggests patients with PD often have UTIs and neurogenic bladder.

“It’s possible that UTIs could be an early symptom of PD rather than a causative factor,” said Dr. Cocoros.

It’s unclear how influenza might lead to PD but it could be that the virus gets into the central nervous system, resulting in neuroinflammation. Cytokines generated in response to the influenza infection might damage the brain.

“The infection could be a ‘primer’ or an initial ‘hit’ to the system, maybe setting people up for PD,” said Dr. Cocoros.

As for the current COVID-19 pandemic, some experts are concerned about a potential surge in PD cases in decades to come, and are calling for prospective monitoring of patients with this infection, said Dr. Cocoros.

However, she noted that infections don’t account for all PD cases and that genetic and environmental factors also influence risk.

Many individuals who contract influenza don’t seek medical care or get tested, so it’s possible the study counted those who had the infection as unexposed. Another potential study limitation was that small numbers for some infections, for example, Helicobacter pylori and hepatitis C, limited the ability to interpret results.
 

‘Exciting and important’ findings

Commenting on the research for this news organization, Aparna Wagle Shukla, MD, professor, Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases, University of Florida, Gainesville, said the results amid the current pandemic are “exciting and important” and “have reinvigorated interest” in the role of infection in PD.

However, the study had some limitations, an important one being lack of accounting for confounding factors, including environmental factors, she said. Exposure to pesticides, living in a rural area, drinking well water, and having had a head injury may increase PD risk, whereas high intake of caffeine, nicotine, alcohol, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs might lower the risk.

The researchers did not take into account exposure to multiple microbes or “infection burden,” said Dr. Wagle Shukla, who was not involved in the current study. In addition, as the data are from a single country with exposure to specific influenza strains, application of the findings elsewhere may be limited.

Dr. Wagle Shukla noted that a case-control design “isn’t ideal” from an epidemiological perspective. “Future studies should involve large cohorts followed longitudinally.”

The study was supported by grants from the Lundbeck Foundation and the Augustinus Foundation. Dr. Cocoros has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Several coauthors have disclosed relationships with industry. The full list can be found with the original article.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Influenza infection is linked to a subsequent diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease (PD) more than 10 years later, resurfacing a long-held debate about whether infection increases the risk for movement disorders over the long term.

In a large case-control study, investigators found the odds of PD were elevated by approximately 90% for PD that occurred more than 15 years after influenza infection and by more than 70% for PD occurring more than 10 years after the flu.

“This study is not definitive by any means, but it certainly suggests there are potential long-term consequences from influenza,” study investigator Noelle M. Cocoros, DSc, research scientist at Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute and Harvard Medical School, Boston, said in an interview.

The study was published online Oct. 25 in JAMA Neurology.

Ongoing debate

The debate about whether influenza is associated with PD has been going on as far back as the 1918 influenza pandemic, when experts documented parkinsonism in affected individuals.

Using data from the Danish patient registry, researchers identified 10,271 subjects diagnosed with PD during a 17-year period (2000-2016). Of these, 38.7% were female, and the mean age was 71.4 years.

They matched these subjects for age and sex to 51,355 controls without PD. Compared with controls, slightly fewer individuals with PD had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or emphysema, but there was a similar distribution of cardiovascular disease and various other conditions.

Researchers collected data on influenza diagnoses from inpatient and outpatient hospital clinics from 1977 to 2016. They plotted these by month and year on a graph, calculated the median number of diagnoses per month, and identified peaks as those with more than threefold the median.

They categorized cases in groups related to the time between the infection and PD: More than 10 years, 10-15 years, and more than 15 years.

The time lapse accounts for a rather long “run-up” to PD, said Dr. Cocoros. There’s a sometimes decades-long preclinical phase before patients develop typical motor signs and a prodromal phase where they may present with nonmotor symptoms such as sleep disorders and constipation.

“We expected there would be at least 10 years between any infection and PD if there was an association present,” said Dr. Cocoros.

Investigators found an association between influenza exposure and PD diagnosis “that held up over time,” she said.

For more than 10 years before PD, the likelihood of a diagnosis for the infected compared with the unexposed was increased 73% (odds ratio [OR] 1.73; 95% confidence interval, 1.11-2.71; P = .02) after adjustment for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, emphysema, lung cancer, Crohn’s disease, and ulcerative colitis.

The odds increased with more time from infection. For more than 15 years, the adjusted OR was 1.91 (95% CI, 1.14 - 3.19; P =.01).

However, for the 10- to 15-year time frame, the point estimate was reduced and the CI nonsignificant (OR, 1.33; 95% CI, 0.54-3.27; P = .53). This “is a little hard to interpret,” but could be a result of the small numbers, exposure misclassification, or because “the longer time interval is what’s meaningful,” said Dr. Cocoros.
 

 

 

Potential COVID-19–related PD surge?

In a sensitivity analysis, researchers looked at peak infection activity. “We wanted to increase the likelihood of these diagnoses representing actual infection,” Dr. Cocoros noted.

Here, the OR was still elevated at more than 10 years, but the CI was quite wide and included 1 (OR, 1.52; 95% CI, 0.80-2.89; P = .21). “So the association holds up, but the estimates are quite unstable,” said Dr. Cocoros.

Researchers examined associations with numerous other infection types, but did not see the same trend over time. Some infections – for example, gastrointestinal infections and septicemia – were associated with PD within 5 years, but most associations appeared to be null after more than 10 years.

“There seemed to be associations earlier between the infection and PD, which we interpret to suggest there’s actually not a meaningful association,” said Dr. Cocoros.

An exception might be urinary tract infections (UTIs), where after 10 years, the adjusted OR was 1.19 (95% CI, 1.01-1.40). Research suggests patients with PD often have UTIs and neurogenic bladder.

“It’s possible that UTIs could be an early symptom of PD rather than a causative factor,” said Dr. Cocoros.

It’s unclear how influenza might lead to PD but it could be that the virus gets into the central nervous system, resulting in neuroinflammation. Cytokines generated in response to the influenza infection might damage the brain.

“The infection could be a ‘primer’ or an initial ‘hit’ to the system, maybe setting people up for PD,” said Dr. Cocoros.

As for the current COVID-19 pandemic, some experts are concerned about a potential surge in PD cases in decades to come, and are calling for prospective monitoring of patients with this infection, said Dr. Cocoros.

However, she noted that infections don’t account for all PD cases and that genetic and environmental factors also influence risk.

Many individuals who contract influenza don’t seek medical care or get tested, so it’s possible the study counted those who had the infection as unexposed. Another potential study limitation was that small numbers for some infections, for example, Helicobacter pylori and hepatitis C, limited the ability to interpret results.
 

‘Exciting and important’ findings

Commenting on the research for this news organization, Aparna Wagle Shukla, MD, professor, Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases, University of Florida, Gainesville, said the results amid the current pandemic are “exciting and important” and “have reinvigorated interest” in the role of infection in PD.

However, the study had some limitations, an important one being lack of accounting for confounding factors, including environmental factors, she said. Exposure to pesticides, living in a rural area, drinking well water, and having had a head injury may increase PD risk, whereas high intake of caffeine, nicotine, alcohol, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs might lower the risk.

The researchers did not take into account exposure to multiple microbes or “infection burden,” said Dr. Wagle Shukla, who was not involved in the current study. In addition, as the data are from a single country with exposure to specific influenza strains, application of the findings elsewhere may be limited.

Dr. Wagle Shukla noted that a case-control design “isn’t ideal” from an epidemiological perspective. “Future studies should involve large cohorts followed longitudinally.”

The study was supported by grants from the Lundbeck Foundation and the Augustinus Foundation. Dr. Cocoros has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Several coauthors have disclosed relationships with industry. The full list can be found with the original article.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Influenza infection is linked to a subsequent diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease (PD) more than 10 years later, resurfacing a long-held debate about whether infection increases the risk for movement disorders over the long term.

In a large case-control study, investigators found the odds of PD were elevated by approximately 90% for PD that occurred more than 15 years after influenza infection and by more than 70% for PD occurring more than 10 years after the flu.

“This study is not definitive by any means, but it certainly suggests there are potential long-term consequences from influenza,” study investigator Noelle M. Cocoros, DSc, research scientist at Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute and Harvard Medical School, Boston, said in an interview.

The study was published online Oct. 25 in JAMA Neurology.

Ongoing debate

The debate about whether influenza is associated with PD has been going on as far back as the 1918 influenza pandemic, when experts documented parkinsonism in affected individuals.

Using data from the Danish patient registry, researchers identified 10,271 subjects diagnosed with PD during a 17-year period (2000-2016). Of these, 38.7% were female, and the mean age was 71.4 years.

They matched these subjects for age and sex to 51,355 controls without PD. Compared with controls, slightly fewer individuals with PD had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or emphysema, but there was a similar distribution of cardiovascular disease and various other conditions.

Researchers collected data on influenza diagnoses from inpatient and outpatient hospital clinics from 1977 to 2016. They plotted these by month and year on a graph, calculated the median number of diagnoses per month, and identified peaks as those with more than threefold the median.

They categorized cases in groups related to the time between the infection and PD: More than 10 years, 10-15 years, and more than 15 years.

The time lapse accounts for a rather long “run-up” to PD, said Dr. Cocoros. There’s a sometimes decades-long preclinical phase before patients develop typical motor signs and a prodromal phase where they may present with nonmotor symptoms such as sleep disorders and constipation.

“We expected there would be at least 10 years between any infection and PD if there was an association present,” said Dr. Cocoros.

Investigators found an association between influenza exposure and PD diagnosis “that held up over time,” she said.

For more than 10 years before PD, the likelihood of a diagnosis for the infected compared with the unexposed was increased 73% (odds ratio [OR] 1.73; 95% confidence interval, 1.11-2.71; P = .02) after adjustment for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, emphysema, lung cancer, Crohn’s disease, and ulcerative colitis.

The odds increased with more time from infection. For more than 15 years, the adjusted OR was 1.91 (95% CI, 1.14 - 3.19; P =.01).

However, for the 10- to 15-year time frame, the point estimate was reduced and the CI nonsignificant (OR, 1.33; 95% CI, 0.54-3.27; P = .53). This “is a little hard to interpret,” but could be a result of the small numbers, exposure misclassification, or because “the longer time interval is what’s meaningful,” said Dr. Cocoros.
 

 

 

Potential COVID-19–related PD surge?

In a sensitivity analysis, researchers looked at peak infection activity. “We wanted to increase the likelihood of these diagnoses representing actual infection,” Dr. Cocoros noted.

Here, the OR was still elevated at more than 10 years, but the CI was quite wide and included 1 (OR, 1.52; 95% CI, 0.80-2.89; P = .21). “So the association holds up, but the estimates are quite unstable,” said Dr. Cocoros.

Researchers examined associations with numerous other infection types, but did not see the same trend over time. Some infections – for example, gastrointestinal infections and septicemia – were associated with PD within 5 years, but most associations appeared to be null after more than 10 years.

“There seemed to be associations earlier between the infection and PD, which we interpret to suggest there’s actually not a meaningful association,” said Dr. Cocoros.

An exception might be urinary tract infections (UTIs), where after 10 years, the adjusted OR was 1.19 (95% CI, 1.01-1.40). Research suggests patients with PD often have UTIs and neurogenic bladder.

“It’s possible that UTIs could be an early symptom of PD rather than a causative factor,” said Dr. Cocoros.

It’s unclear how influenza might lead to PD but it could be that the virus gets into the central nervous system, resulting in neuroinflammation. Cytokines generated in response to the influenza infection might damage the brain.

“The infection could be a ‘primer’ or an initial ‘hit’ to the system, maybe setting people up for PD,” said Dr. Cocoros.

As for the current COVID-19 pandemic, some experts are concerned about a potential surge in PD cases in decades to come, and are calling for prospective monitoring of patients with this infection, said Dr. Cocoros.

However, she noted that infections don’t account for all PD cases and that genetic and environmental factors also influence risk.

Many individuals who contract influenza don’t seek medical care or get tested, so it’s possible the study counted those who had the infection as unexposed. Another potential study limitation was that small numbers for some infections, for example, Helicobacter pylori and hepatitis C, limited the ability to interpret results.
 

‘Exciting and important’ findings

Commenting on the research for this news organization, Aparna Wagle Shukla, MD, professor, Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases, University of Florida, Gainesville, said the results amid the current pandemic are “exciting and important” and “have reinvigorated interest” in the role of infection in PD.

However, the study had some limitations, an important one being lack of accounting for confounding factors, including environmental factors, she said. Exposure to pesticides, living in a rural area, drinking well water, and having had a head injury may increase PD risk, whereas high intake of caffeine, nicotine, alcohol, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs might lower the risk.

The researchers did not take into account exposure to multiple microbes or “infection burden,” said Dr. Wagle Shukla, who was not involved in the current study. In addition, as the data are from a single country with exposure to specific influenza strains, application of the findings elsewhere may be limited.

Dr. Wagle Shukla noted that a case-control design “isn’t ideal” from an epidemiological perspective. “Future studies should involve large cohorts followed longitudinally.”

The study was supported by grants from the Lundbeck Foundation and the Augustinus Foundation. Dr. Cocoros has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Several coauthors have disclosed relationships with industry. The full list can be found with the original article.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Avoidant attachment style may drive mood in movement disorders

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Fri, 10/15/2021 - 15:00

Patients with functional neurological disorders demonstrate higher levels of depression and alexithymia – in addition to signs of an avoidant attachment style – compared with those with other neurological disorders and healthy controls, investigators report.

The pathological mechanism of functional neurological disorders (FND) remains poorly understood, but current models include both psychological and environmental factors, Sofia Cuoco, PhD, and colleagues wrote in a study published in the Journal of Psychosomatic Research.

Previous studies have suggested a relationship between attachment styles (AS) and psychiatric symptoms in FND patients but most have been limited to the FND population, noted Dr. Cuoco, of the University of Salerno, Italy, and colleagues. In FND, “it is unclear to what extent psychiatric features are explained by AS per se or are part of the FND spectrum,” they said.

To conduct the study, the investigators recruited 46 patients with FND, 34 patients with neurological disorders (ND) and 30 healthy controls. Demographic characteristics, including age, education, and gender, were similar among the groups. Overall, depression and alexithymia were significantly more prevalent in the FND group, compared with the other groups. Anxiety was more common in the FND group, compared with healthy controls, but similar compared with the ND group. Patients in the FND group reported significantly lower quality of life, compared with those in the other groups.

In a multivariate analysis aimed at examining AS and psychiatric features, the researchers found that the Experiences in Close Relationships–Revised questionnaire avoidance, Beck Depression Inventory, Somatic Affective, and the 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale Difficulty Identifying Feelings scale (TAS-20 Difficulty Identifying Feelings) were significant predictors of FND and accounted for about half of the variance.

The researchers also compared FND to functional seizures, and found that the TAS-20 Difficulty Identifying Feelings scale, the Hamilton Anxiety Scale–Anxiety, and female gender were significant predictors of functional seizures.

The results were mainly in line with those from previous studies, the researchers said. However, “one of the novelties of this study is the inclusion of patients with other ND, whereby we demonstrated that FND patients were more depressed, anxious, and alexithymic than ND, which might suggest that these psychiatric features would not be merely reactive to physical symptoms,” they noted.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the absence of systematic interviews for personality disorders or traits, monitoring psychotropic medications, and conducting formal psychiatric assessments, the researchers noted. Other limitations include the heterogenous study population and absence of data on symptom severity, history of trauma, or other factors that might contributed to FND, they said.

However, the results suggest that avoidant AS might play an important role in the occurrence of psychiatric features in FND patients and should be considered in managing these conditions. More research is needed to explore the impact of attachment on pathophysiology with more complex instruments, such as the Adult Attachment Interview, Dr. Cuoco and colleagues said.

The study received no outside funding, and the researchers disclosed no financial conflicts.

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Patients with functional neurological disorders demonstrate higher levels of depression and alexithymia – in addition to signs of an avoidant attachment style – compared with those with other neurological disorders and healthy controls, investigators report.

The pathological mechanism of functional neurological disorders (FND) remains poorly understood, but current models include both psychological and environmental factors, Sofia Cuoco, PhD, and colleagues wrote in a study published in the Journal of Psychosomatic Research.

Previous studies have suggested a relationship between attachment styles (AS) and psychiatric symptoms in FND patients but most have been limited to the FND population, noted Dr. Cuoco, of the University of Salerno, Italy, and colleagues. In FND, “it is unclear to what extent psychiatric features are explained by AS per se or are part of the FND spectrum,” they said.

To conduct the study, the investigators recruited 46 patients with FND, 34 patients with neurological disorders (ND) and 30 healthy controls. Demographic characteristics, including age, education, and gender, were similar among the groups. Overall, depression and alexithymia were significantly more prevalent in the FND group, compared with the other groups. Anxiety was more common in the FND group, compared with healthy controls, but similar compared with the ND group. Patients in the FND group reported significantly lower quality of life, compared with those in the other groups.

In a multivariate analysis aimed at examining AS and psychiatric features, the researchers found that the Experiences in Close Relationships–Revised questionnaire avoidance, Beck Depression Inventory, Somatic Affective, and the 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale Difficulty Identifying Feelings scale (TAS-20 Difficulty Identifying Feelings) were significant predictors of FND and accounted for about half of the variance.

The researchers also compared FND to functional seizures, and found that the TAS-20 Difficulty Identifying Feelings scale, the Hamilton Anxiety Scale–Anxiety, and female gender were significant predictors of functional seizures.

The results were mainly in line with those from previous studies, the researchers said. However, “one of the novelties of this study is the inclusion of patients with other ND, whereby we demonstrated that FND patients were more depressed, anxious, and alexithymic than ND, which might suggest that these psychiatric features would not be merely reactive to physical symptoms,” they noted.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the absence of systematic interviews for personality disorders or traits, monitoring psychotropic medications, and conducting formal psychiatric assessments, the researchers noted. Other limitations include the heterogenous study population and absence of data on symptom severity, history of trauma, or other factors that might contributed to FND, they said.

However, the results suggest that avoidant AS might play an important role in the occurrence of psychiatric features in FND patients and should be considered in managing these conditions. More research is needed to explore the impact of attachment on pathophysiology with more complex instruments, such as the Adult Attachment Interview, Dr. Cuoco and colleagues said.

The study received no outside funding, and the researchers disclosed no financial conflicts.

Patients with functional neurological disorders demonstrate higher levels of depression and alexithymia – in addition to signs of an avoidant attachment style – compared with those with other neurological disorders and healthy controls, investigators report.

The pathological mechanism of functional neurological disorders (FND) remains poorly understood, but current models include both psychological and environmental factors, Sofia Cuoco, PhD, and colleagues wrote in a study published in the Journal of Psychosomatic Research.

Previous studies have suggested a relationship between attachment styles (AS) and psychiatric symptoms in FND patients but most have been limited to the FND population, noted Dr. Cuoco, of the University of Salerno, Italy, and colleagues. In FND, “it is unclear to what extent psychiatric features are explained by AS per se or are part of the FND spectrum,” they said.

To conduct the study, the investigators recruited 46 patients with FND, 34 patients with neurological disorders (ND) and 30 healthy controls. Demographic characteristics, including age, education, and gender, were similar among the groups. Overall, depression and alexithymia were significantly more prevalent in the FND group, compared with the other groups. Anxiety was more common in the FND group, compared with healthy controls, but similar compared with the ND group. Patients in the FND group reported significantly lower quality of life, compared with those in the other groups.

In a multivariate analysis aimed at examining AS and psychiatric features, the researchers found that the Experiences in Close Relationships–Revised questionnaire avoidance, Beck Depression Inventory, Somatic Affective, and the 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale Difficulty Identifying Feelings scale (TAS-20 Difficulty Identifying Feelings) were significant predictors of FND and accounted for about half of the variance.

The researchers also compared FND to functional seizures, and found that the TAS-20 Difficulty Identifying Feelings scale, the Hamilton Anxiety Scale–Anxiety, and female gender were significant predictors of functional seizures.

The results were mainly in line with those from previous studies, the researchers said. However, “one of the novelties of this study is the inclusion of patients with other ND, whereby we demonstrated that FND patients were more depressed, anxious, and alexithymic than ND, which might suggest that these psychiatric features would not be merely reactive to physical symptoms,” they noted.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the absence of systematic interviews for personality disorders or traits, monitoring psychotropic medications, and conducting formal psychiatric assessments, the researchers noted. Other limitations include the heterogenous study population and absence of data on symptom severity, history of trauma, or other factors that might contributed to FND, they said.

However, the results suggest that avoidant AS might play an important role in the occurrence of psychiatric features in FND patients and should be considered in managing these conditions. More research is needed to explore the impact of attachment on pathophysiology with more complex instruments, such as the Adult Attachment Interview, Dr. Cuoco and colleagues said.

The study received no outside funding, and the researchers disclosed no financial conflicts.

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