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Neurostimulation in tardive dystonia/dyskinesia: A delayed start, sham stimulation-controlled randomized trial

Authors :
Christoph Schrader
Alfons Schnitzler
Andreas Kupsch
Joerg Mueller
Joachim K. Krauss
Günther Deuschl
Martin Südmeyer
Jan Vesper
Christine Winter
Jan-Uwe Müller
Jens Volkmann
Doreen Gruber
Daniela Falk
Gerd-Helge Schneider
Werner Poewe
Source :
Brain Stimulation, Vol 11, Iss 6, Pp 1368-1377 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

Introduction Growing evidence suggests that pallidal deep brain stimulation represents a potential new therapeutic avenue in tardive dystonia/dyskinesia, but controlled and blinded randomized studies (RCT) are missing. The present RCT compares dystonia/dyskinesia severity of pallidal neurostimulation in patients with tardive dystonia using a delayed-start design paradigm. Methods Dystonia/dyskinesia severity was assessed via blinded videos following pallidal neurostimulation at 3 (blinded phase) and 6 months (open extension phase). Primary endpoint was the percentage change of dystonia severity (Burke-Fahn-Marsden-Dystonia-Rating-Scale, BFMDRS) at 3 months between active vs. sham neurostimulation using blinded-video assessment. Secondary endpoints comprised clinical rating scores for movement disorders. Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00331669. Results Twenty-five patients were randomized (1:1) to active (n = 12) or sham neurostimulation (n = 13). In the intention-to-treat analyses the between group difference of dystonia severity (BFMDRS) between active vs. sham stimulation was not significant at 3 months. Three months post-randomisation dystonia severity improved significantly within the neurostimulation by 22.8% and non-significantly within the sham group (12.0%) compared to their respective baseline severity. During the open-label extension with both groups being actively treated, significant and pronounced improvements of 41.5% were observed via blinded evaluation. Adverse events (n = 10) occurred in 10/25 of patients during the 6 months, mostly related to surgical implantation of the device; all resolved without sequelae. Conclusion The primary endpoint of this randomized trial was not significant, most likely due to incomplete recruitment. However, pronounced improvements of most secondary endpoints at 3 and 6 months provide evidence for efficacy and safety of pallidal neurostimulation in tardive dystonia.

Details

ISSN :
1935861X
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain Stimulation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1cae67999a9db721e965608a7c82537e