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Title: The D1/D5 Dopamine Partial Agonist PF-06412562 in Advanced-Stage Parkinson's Disease: A Feasibility Study. Author: Huang X, Lewis MM, Van Scoy LJ, De Jesus S, Eslinger PJ, Arnold AC, Miller AJ, Fernandez-Mendoza J, Snyder B, Harrington W, Kong L, Wang X, Sun D, Delnomdedieu M, Duvvuri S, Mahoney SE, Gray DL, Mailman RB. Journal: J Parkinsons Dis; 2020; 10(4):1515-1527. PubMed ID: 32986682. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Current drug treatments have little efficacy in advanced-to-end-stage Parkinson's disease (advPD), yet there are no reports of interventional trials in advPD. D1 dopamine agonists have the potential to provide benefit. OBJECTIVE: To determine the feasibility and safety of the selective D1/D5 dopamine partial agonist PF 06412562 in advPD. METHODS: A two-week, randomized, double blind, crossover phase Ib study in advPD patients compared standard-of-care (SoC) carbidopa/levodopa with PF 06412562. Each week, there was a Day 1 baseline evaluation with overnight levodopa washout, then treatment on Days 2 and 3 with either SoC or PF-06412562 (split dose 25 + 20 mg), followed by discharge on Day 4. Primary endpoints were safety and tolerability. Secondary endpoints were global clinical impression of change (GCI-C) rated by clinicians and caregivers. RESULTS: Eight advPD patients and their caregivers consented to participate and six were randomized (average disease duration: 22 y). None withdrew voluntarily. One participant with baseline Day 1 dehydration, pre-renal kidney injury, and autonomic dysfunction experienced symptomatic and serious hypotension after receiving PF-06412562 in Week 1 and was discontinued from the study. All other adverse events were rated mild (PF-06412562: n = 1, SoC: n = 0), moderate (PF-06412562: n = 1, SoC: n = 1), or severe but non-serious (PF-06412562: n = 3, SoC: n = 2). No clinically meaningful laboratory changes were observed. Among the five participants who completed the study, GCI-C favored PF-06412562 in two per clinicians' and four participants per caregivers' rating. CONCLUSION: PF-06412562 was tolerated in advPD patients. This study provides the feasibility for future safety and efficacy studies in this population with unmet needs.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]