Risk Factors for Peak Dose Dyskinesia in 100 Levodopa-treated
Parkinsonian Patients
Pierre J Blanchet, Pierre Allard, Laurent Grégoire,
François Tardif and Paul J Bédard

Abstract:
Background: No clinical parameter other
than "sufficient" dopamine denervation and exposure to exogenous
levodopa has been unquestionably linked to dyskinesia in levodopa-treated
Parkinson's disease patients. Methods: We retrospectively
analyzed data on 100 consecutive patients treated with levodopa
for 1 to 18 years to identify clinical risk factors for dyskinesia.
The cumulative dyskinesia-free survival probability in relation
to levodopa therapy was assessed using the Kaplan-Meier method.
Results: Overall, 56% of patients developed dyskinesia
after a mean of 2.9 years, a figure similar to the average duration
of levodopa treatment in the non-dyskinetic group. Dyskinetic
patients were significantly younger at disease onset, but their
mean latency to dyskinesia induction after levodopa initiation
was not different from older dyskinetic individuals and the
overall dyskinesia-free survival of younger subjects was not
worse either. Dyskinetic patients were on a higher daily levodopa
dose than non-dyskinetic subjects when dyskinesia emerged, but
the cumulative levodopa dose used prior to dyskinesia did not
discriminate dyskinetic from non-dyskinetic patients. A delay
in initiating levodopa therapy of more than three years after
disease onset and levodopa treatment initiation in Hoehn-Yahr
stage II compared to stage I patients did not increase the probability
of developing dyskinesia over time. Conclusions:
Since withholding levodopa therapy did not increase the risk
for dyskinesia in our patients and can delay the emergence of
dyskinesia after onset of parkinsonian symptom, a trial with
a dopaminomimetic agonist as initial treatment appears logical.
|
Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1996; 23: 189-193
|
|