A multicenter double‐blind placebo‐controlled trial of pergolide as an adjunct to sinemet® in Parkinson's disease

C. Warren Olanow(University of South Florida), Stanley Fahn(Columbia University), Manfred D. Muenter(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Harold L. Klawans(Rush University Medical Center), Howard I. Hurtig(University of Pennsylvania), Matthew Stern(University of Pennsylvania), Ira Shoulson(University of Rochester), Roger Kurlan(University of Rochester), J. David Grimes(Ottawa Hospital), Joseph Jankovic(Baylor College of Medicine), Margaret M. Hoehn(University of Colorado Denver), Charles H. Markham(University of California, Los Angeles), R. Duvisin(Johnson University), O. M. Reinmuth(University of Pittsburgh), Hubert A. Leonard(Noran Neurological Clinic), Eric Ahlskog(Mayo Clinic), Robert Feldman(Boston University), Linda A. Hershey(Buffalo VA Medical Center), Melvin D. Yahr(Mount Sinai Hospital)
Movement Disorders
January 1, 1994
Cited by 203

Abstract

Three hundred and seventy-six subjects with advanced Parkinson's disease participated in a prospective, double-blind placebo-controlled study of the dopamine agonist pergolide mesylate as an adjunct to Sinemet. At 6 months, patients randomized to pergolide had a statistically significant improvement in total Parkinson's score, scores of activities of daily living, motor function, number of "off" hours, Hoehn and Yahr stage, and numerous parameters of parkinsonian function including bradykinesia, rigidity, gait, and dexterity. This benefit was obtained with the addition of a mean dose of 2.94 mg of pergolide, which permitted a 24.7% reduction in dose of levodopa. Adverse reactions were, for the most part, mild, reversible, and not of major clinical significance. No significant cardiac or electrocardiographic abnormalities were detected. This study demonstrates that pergolide mesylate, as an adjunct to levodopa, is an effective antiparkinsonian agent that provides clinical improvement while permitting a reduction in levodopa dose.


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