Department of Clinical Pharmacology, University Hospital of Toulouse, France.
Mov Disord. 2011 May;26(6):1072-82. doi: 10.1002/mds.23714.
In the mid-1980s, the treatment of Parkinson's disease was quite exclusively centered on dopatherapy and was focusing on dopamine systems and motor symptoms. A few dopamine agonists and a monoamine oxidase B inhibitor (selegiline) were used as adjuncts in advanced Parkinson's disease. In the early 2010s, levodopa remains the gold standard. New insights into the organization of the basal ganglia paved the way for deep brain stimulation, especially of the subthalamic nucleus, providing spectacular improvement of drug-refractory levodopa-induced motor complications. Novel dopamine agonists (pramipexole, ropinirole, rotigotine), catecholmethyltransferase inhibitors (entacapone), and monoamine oxidase B inhibitors (rasagiline) have also been developed to provide more continuous oral delivery of dopaminergic stimulation in order to improve motor outcomes. Using dopamine agonists early, before levodopa, proved to delay the onset of dyskinesia, although this is achieved at the price of potentially disabling daytime somnolence or impulse control disorders. The demonstration of an antidyskinetic effect of the glutamate antagonist amantadine opened the door for novel nondopaminergic approaches of Parkinson's disease therapy. More recently, nonmotor symptoms (depression, dementia, and psychosis) have been the focus of the first randomized controlled trials in this field. Despite therapeutic advances, Parkinson's disease continues to be a relentlessly progressive disorder leading to severe disability. Neuroprotective interventions able to modify the progression of Parkinson's disease have stood out as a failed therapeutic goal over the last 2 decades, despite potentially encouraging results with compounds like rasagiline. Newer molecular targets, new animal models, novel clinical trial designs, and biomarkers to assess disease modification have created hope for future therapeutic interventions.
在 20 世纪 80 年代中期,帕金森病的治疗方法主要集中在多巴胺疗法上,侧重于多巴胺系统和运动症状。一些多巴胺激动剂和单胺氧化酶 B 抑制剂(司来吉兰)被用作晚期帕金森病的辅助治疗药物。在 21 世纪初,左旋多巴仍然是金标准。对基底神经节组织的新认识为深部脑刺激铺平了道路,特别是对丘脑底核的刺激,为药物难治性左旋多巴诱导的运动并发症提供了显著改善。新型多巴胺激动剂(普拉克索、罗匹尼罗、罗替高汀)、儿茶酚-O-甲基转移酶抑制剂(恩他卡朋)和单胺氧化酶 B 抑制剂(雷沙吉兰)也已开发出来,以提供更持续的口服多巴胺刺激,从而改善运动效果。早期使用多巴胺激动剂,在左旋多巴之前使用,被证明可以延迟运动障碍的发生,尽管这是以潜在的白天嗜睡或冲动控制障碍等致残性为代价的。谷氨酸拮抗剂金刚烷胺具有抗运动障碍作用的发现为帕金森病治疗的新型非多巴胺能方法开辟了道路。最近,非运动症状(抑郁、痴呆和精神病)成为该领域首次随机对照试验的焦点。尽管治疗取得了进展,但帕金森病仍然是一种进行性致残疾病。在过去的 20 年里,尽管像雷沙吉兰这样的化合物可能有令人鼓舞的结果,但能够改变帕金森病进展的神经保护干预措施仍然作为一个失败的治疗目标。新的分子靶点、新的动物模型、新的临床试验设计和用于评估疾病修饰的生物标志物为未来的治疗干预带来了希望。