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February 08, 2000; 54 (3) Articles

Objective changes in motor function during placebo treatment in PD

Christopher G. Goetz, Sue Leurgans, Rema Raman, Glenn T. Stebbins
First published February 8, 2000, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.54.3.710
Christopher G. Goetz
MD
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Sue Leurgans
PhD
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Rema Raman
MS
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Glenn T. Stebbins
PhD
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Citation
Objective changes in motor function during placebo treatment in PD
Christopher G. Goetz, Sue Leurgans, Rema Raman, Glenn T. Stebbins
Neurology Feb 2000, 54 (3) 710; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.54.3.710

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Abstract

Objective: To examine the frequency, temporal development, and stability of objectively derived motor changes during placebo treatment in PD and to define the clinical domains and demographic groups most affected.

Background: Placebo effects are documented in neurology, but the timing and specific disabilities most susceptible to changes during placebo treatment in PD have not been examined.

Methods: The authors examined the placebo-treated group from a randomized, multicenter, placebo-controlled clinical trial of monotherapy ropinerole in PD patients without motor fluctuations. In 105 patients, they evaluated placebo-associated effects on the motor section of the Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS), dividing the motor examination into four categories: tremor, bradykinesia, rigidity, and gait/balance/midline functions. The motor UPDRS and its subscales were compared over time (at baseline and at 4, 12, and 24 weeks) using Wilcoxon’s signed rank test. They applied a rigorous definition of placebo-associated improvement as an improvement over baseline score in motor UPDRS of at least 50% or a change in at least two motor items at any one visit by ≥2 points.

Results: During the 6-month study, 16% of subjects improved on placebo treatment. The prevalence of response was steady (8 to 9%) at any one visit without a predominance of an early effect. No patient showed a placebo-associated improvement on all visits. All domains of parkinsonian disability were subject to placebo-associated improvement, with a trend toward more response in bradykinesia and rigidity than in tremor or gait/balance/midline function. Gender, age, disease duration, and baseline disability score did not influence the likelihood of improvement in association with placebo treatment.

Conclusion: Based on a rigorous definition of placebo-associated improvement, prominent improvements in objective measures of PD disability occur during clinical trials. Because placebo-associated improvements occur throughout a 6-month trial, placebo-controlled studies in PD should be at least 6 months to capture early as well as late improvements.

  • Received April 2, 1999.
  • Accepted September 24, 1999.
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