Pergolide versus levodopa monotherapy in early Parkinson's disease patients: The PELMOPET study

WH Oertel*, E Wolters, C Sampaio, S Gimenez-Roldan, B Bergamasco, M Dujardin, DG Grosset, G Arnold, KL Leenders, HP Hundemer, A Lledo, A Wood, P Frewer, J Schwarz

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    191 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Dopamine agonists are used as initial treatment in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) to reduce incidence and severity of motor complcations. This paradigm is based on longterm studies, allowing "rescue" therapy with levodopa. The present strict monotherapy study (PELMOPET, the acronym for the pergolide-versus-L-dopa-monotherapy-and-positron-emission-tomography trial) evaluated the efficacy and safety of pergolide versus levodopa without levodopa "rescue" medication. This multicenter, double-blind, randomized, 3-year trial compared pergolide monotherapy (n = 148) with levodopa monotherapy (n = 146) in dopamine-naive patients with early PD (Hoehn and Yahr stage 1-2.5). Primary efficacy measures were clinical efficacy, severity and time to onset of motor complications, and disease progression. During the 3 years, severity of motor complications was significantly lower and time to onset of dyskinesia was significantly delayed in the group receiving pergolide (3.23 mg/ day) compared with those receiving levodopa (504 mg/day). However, time to onset of motor complications was not longer in patients receiving pergolide after 3 years. Symptomatic relief (assessed by Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale [UPDRS], UPDRS II, and III, Clinical Global Impressions [CGI] severity, and CGI and Patient Global Impressions [PGI] improvement) was significantly greater in patients receiving levodopa. Adverse events led to discontinuation of therapy in 17.6% of pergolide patients and 9.6% of levodopa patients. This is the first study comparing strict monotherapy with a dopamine agonist versus levodopa in previously untreated early PD. In principle, both levodopa and a dopamine agonist such as pergolide seem to be suitable options as initial PD therapy. The choice remains with the treating physician based oil the different efficacy and adverse event profiles. (c) 2005 Movement Disorder Society

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)343-353
    Number of pages11
    JournalMovement Disorders
    Volume21
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Mar-2006

    Keywords

    • pergolide
    • levodopa
    • motor complications
    • dyskinesia
    • Parkinson's disease
    • monotherapy
    • symptomatic effect
    • PELMOPET
    • RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL
    • VALVULAR HEART-DISEASE
    • INDUCED DYSKINESIAS
    • MOTOR FLUCTUATIONS
    • INITIAL TREATMENT
    • BROMOCRIPTINE
    • MULTICENTER
    • CABERGOLINE
    • ADJUNCT
    • 5-YEAR

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Pergolide versus levodopa monotherapy in early Parkinson's disease patients: The PELMOPET study'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this