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Efficacy of Nilotinib in Patients With Moderately Advanced Parkinson Disease

Authors :
Jaime Adams
Samuel Frank
Deborah Baker
Saurav Brahmachari
Elizabeth A. Klingner
Jason Aldred
Jennifer Mule
Meredith Spindler
Cornelia Kamp
Phounsavath Muneath
Claudia Rocha
Liana Baker
Gian Pal
Doozie Russell
Yvette Pitchford
Tina Ward
Olga Kishchenko
Kellie Keith
Angela S Stovall
Courtney Blair
John Slevin Slevin
Vanessa K. Hinson
Grace Bwala
Brian K. Fiske
Liana S. Rosenthal
Joohi Shahed
Andrew P. Duker
Patrick Bolger
Gary Rafaloff
David Weiner
Adolfo Ramirez-Zamora
Zoltan Mari
Renee Wagner Wagner
Helen Matthews
Karen Blindauer
Derek B. Ridgeway
Alexandria Oliver
Carlinda Field
Stephanie Burrows
Binit B. Shah
Lauren Seeberger
Charles S. Venuto
Katie Sullivan
Laura Ramirez
Erika F. Augustine
Matthew Swan
Lilliana Dumitrescu
Natividad Stover
Shonna Jenkins
Sharon Evans
Lin Zhang
Anwar Ahmed
Tanya Simuni
Michael A. Schwarzschild
Christopher S. Coffey
Mark S. LeDoux
David-Erick Lafontant
Laura Trusso
Farah Ismail
John L. Goudreau
Eric Molho
Sue Henderson
Cindy Casaceli
Christine Hunter
Holly Reynolds
Albert Y. Hung
Robert A. Hauser
Burton L. Scott
Lynn Wheeler
Kalpana Merchant
Chelsea Caspell-Garcia
Claire E. Wegel
Richard K. Wyse
Patrik Brundin
Christina Gruenwald
Alicia Brocht
Candace Cromer
Lisa Gauger
Melissa Bixby
Emily Carman
Kathryn A. Chung
Nichole McMullen
David Simon
Ken Eaton
Oren A. Levy
Amber Servi
Abigail Simpson
Holly A. Shill
Kelvin L. Chou
Melissa Kostrzebski
Ted M. Dawson
Source :
JAMA Neurology. 78:312
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Medical Association (AMA), 2021.

Abstract

Importance There is a critical need for careful and independent validation of reported symptomatic efficacy and dopaminergic biomarker changes induced by nilotinib in Parkinson disease (PD). Objectives To assess safety and tolerability of nilotinib in participants with moderately advanced PD. Secondary and exploratory objectives were to assess its affect on PD disability, pharmacokinetics, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) penetration, and biomarkers. Design, Setting, and Participants This was a 6-month, multicenter, randomized parallel-group, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Recruitment was from November 20, 2017, to December 28, 2018, and follow-up ended on September 9, 2019. The study was conducted at 25 US sites. The study approached 173 patients, of whom 48 declined, 125 were screened, and 76 who received a stable regimen of PD medications were enrolled (39% screen failure). Interventions Participants were randomized 1:1:1 to placebo, 150-mg nilotinib, or 300-mg nilotinib once daily orally for 6 months, followed by 2-month off-drug evaluation. Main Outcomes and Measures The primary outcomes were safety and tolerability. The tolerability end point was defined as the ability to complete the study while receiving the assigned dose. An active arm was considered tolerable if the percentage of participants meeting the tolerability end point for that group was not significantly lower than the percentage observed in the placebo group. Secondary outcomes included change in PD disability (Movement Disorder Society Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale [MDS-UPDRS], Part II OFF/ON). Exploratory outcomes included serum and CSF pharmacokinetic profile, and CSF dopaminergic biomarkers. Results At baseline, mean (SD) participants’ age was 64.6 (7.5) years, 52 were male (68%), mean (SD) disease duration was 9.9 years (4.7), MDS-UPDRS Part 1-3 OFF score was 66.4 (19.3), ON score was 48.4 (16.2), and Montreal Cognitive Assessment score was 27.1 (2.2). The number of participants who completed the study receiving the assigned dose were 21 (84%), 19 (76%), and 20 (77%) in the placebo, 150-mg, and 300-mg arms, respectively. Both active doses had acceptable safety profile. The most common reasons for drug suspension were asymptomatic, dose-dependent elevations of amylase, and/or lipase. Nilotinib, 150 mg and 300 mg, exhibited worse MDS-UPDRS-3 ON scores compared with placebo, achieving significance for nilotinib, 300 mg, at month 1 (P Conclusions and Relevance While we demonstrated acceptable safety and tolerability of nilotinib in our cohort, the low CSF exposure and lack of biomarkers effect combined with the efficacy data trending in the negative direction indicate that nilotinib should not be further tested in PD. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:NCT03205488

Details

ISSN :
21686149
Volume :
78
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAMA Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8da5bef13be163263b4f128491abd097