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RESEARCH PAPER

Therapeutic Spectrum of Intermittent Apomorphine in Parkinson's Disease: Neuropsychiatric, Behavioral, and Cognitive Analyses.

PMID
41969957
Journal
Noro psikiyatri arsivi
Publication Date
2026-01-01
Grade
C

AI Summary

In a 12-week prospective cohort of 35 PD patients, intermittent subcutaneous apomorphine markedly improved motor function, reduced daily "off" time, and produced significant gains in depression, cognition, and quality-of-life measures, with consistent effects across age groups.

Why It Matters

While not addressing disease modification, the study provides actionable clinical evidence that apomorphine confers broad symptomatic benefits—including non-motor domains—supporting its use, informing endpoint selection for trials, and guiding symptomatic therapeutic strategies despite limited…

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Intermittent subcutaneous (SC) apomorphine is a fast-acting dopamine agonist used in the management of motor fluctuations in advanced Parkinson's disease (PD). While its motor benefits are well established the effects on non-motor domains and the modifying role of chronological age remain less certain. This prospective observational study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of intermittent SC apomorphine on motor and non-motor outcomes in idiopathic PD patients with persistent motor fluctuations despite optimized oral therapy, and to examine whether age influenced therapeutic response. METHODS: Thirty-five idiopathic PD patients treated with intermittent SC apomorphine were followed for twelve weeks and assessed at baseline and week 12. Motor outcomes included Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) Part III and diary-based daily "off" and "on" time without dyskinesia. Non-motor outcomes comprised the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire (PDQ-8), and Parkinson's Disease Sleep Scale (PDSS). Subgroup analyses compared outcomes between patients aged <45 and ≥45 years and interaction effects were explored. RESULTS: MDS-UPDRS Part III scores improved from 45.71 (SD 11.93) to 29.86 (SD 12.24) (p <0.001). Mean daily "off" time decreased from 5.60 (1.65) to 2.26 (0.95) hours, while "on" time without dyskinesia raise from 10.34 (1.76) to 13.89 (0.93) hours (both p <0.001). Non-motor outcomes also improved: BDI declined from 23.03 (5.70) to 18.09 (4.87), MoCA increased from 15.74 (5.51) to 18.03 (6.05), and PDQ-8 from 22.80 (5.60) to 17.54 (5.84) (all p <0.001). Parkinson's disease sleep scale showed no significant change. No significant age-by-treatment interaction effects were detected. CONCLUSION: Intermittent subcutaneous apomorphine was associated with significant improvements in multidimensional aspects, including motor and various non-motor domains, which are closely related to cognition, mood, and quality of life in PD. Benefits were consistent across age groups, indicating chronological age does not influence efficacy.

Score Breakdown

AI Score
66.0
Base Score
72.1
Rank Score
68.8
Narrative Velocity
-
AI Confidence
-
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