Parkinson Center, Center for Neurological Rehabilitation, Zihlschlacht, Switzerland / Faculty of Medicine, Philipps University, Marburg, Germany.
Center for Movement and Functional Neurosurgery, Department of Neurology, University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland.
Swiss Med Wkly. 2021 Mar 6;151:w20419. doi: 10.4414/smw.2021.20419. eCollection 2021 Mar 1.
Currently, the characterisation of advanced Parkinson’s disease (APD) does not follow standardised diagnostic criteria, which complicates the evaluation of ongoing care and treatment strategies, such as eligibility for device-aided treatment (DAT). Therefore, this study aimed to determine the proportion of APD and non-advanced Parkinson’s disease (non-APD) patients treated at specialised movement disorder centres in Switzerland, to compare clinical characteristics of APD versus non-APD patients and to assess eligibility for and use of DAT. Furthermore, potential differences between the Swiss and international situation should be uncovered.
OBSERVE-PD was a cross-sectional, international, observational study including 2615 patients from 128 movement disorder centres in 18 countries. For the Swiss subgroup of the study analysed here, which included 134 patients from 5 movement disorder centres, motor and non-motor symptoms, activities of daily living and quality of life were assessed as endpoints. The correlation between physician’s judgement of APD and the Delphi criteria for APD, which were developed by an international expert group, as well as the clinical burden in APD and non-APD patients and eligibility for and use of DAT were evaluated. The results for the Swiss subgroup were subsequently compared with the international full analysis set of the OBSERVE-PD study.
Based on physician’s judgement, 69.4% of patients included in the Swiss study suffered from APD. A moderate correlation between physician’s judgement and the Delphi criteria for APD was observed (Κ = 0.480, 95% confidence interval 0.317–0.642). Clinical burden was higher for APD patients, as shown by worse scores for activities of daily living, motor symptom severity, dyskinesia duration/disability, duration of “off” time, non-motor symptoms and quality of life as compared with non-APD patients (p <0.0001 for all). The Swiss data for disease burden were comparable to the international findings, except that the Swiss patients showed less “off” time. Amongst APD patients eligible for DAT, the main reason for no DAT in Switzerland was patient refusal, whereas patients needing more time to decide about it was the most frequent reason in the international analysis.
The study shows that the burden of APD in tertiary care centres in Switzerland is comparable to the international situation. Patient refusal is the main reason for no DAT amongst eligible APD patients in such centres. The identification of standard APD classification parameters and evaluation of the reasons for no DAT are relevant for optimising treatment strategies and the transition to DAT.
目前,高级帕金森病(APD)的特征不符合标准化诊断标准,这使得对正在进行的护理和治疗策略的评估变得复杂,例如是否有资格接受设备辅助治疗(DAT)。因此,本研究旨在确定在瑞士专门的运动障碍中心治疗的 APD 和非高级帕金森病(非 APD)患者的比例,比较 APD 与非 APD 患者的临床特征,并评估 DAT 的适用性和使用情况。此外,还应揭示瑞士与国际情况之间的潜在差异。
OBSERVE-PD 是一项横断面、国际性、观察性研究,纳入了来自 18 个国家的 128 个运动障碍中心的 2615 名患者。对于这里分析的瑞士亚组研究,包括来自 5 个运动障碍中心的 134 名患者,评估了运动和非运动症状、日常生活活动和生活质量作为终点。评估了医生对 APD 的判断与由国际专家组制定的 APD Delphi 标准之间的相关性,以及 APD 和非 APD 患者的临床负担以及 DAT 的适用性和使用情况。随后,将瑞士亚组的结果与 OBSERVE-PD 研究的国际全分析集进行比较。
根据医生的判断,瑞士研究纳入的患者中有 69.4%患有 APD。观察到医生判断与 APD Delphi 标准之间存在中度相关性(Κ=0.480,95%置信区间 0.317-0.642)。与非 APD 患者相比,APD 患者的临床负担更高,日常生活活动、运动症状严重程度、运动障碍持续时间/残疾、“关期”持续时间、非运动症状和生活质量的评分更差(所有 p <0.0001)。瑞士的疾病负担数据与国际研究结果相当,只是瑞士患者的“关期”时间较短。在有 DAT 资格的 APD 患者中,瑞士没有 DAT 的主要原因是患者拒绝,而在国际分析中,最常见的原因是患者需要更多时间来决定。
该研究表明,瑞士三级护理中心的 APD 负担与国际情况相当。患者拒绝是此类中心有 DAT 资格的 APD 患者没有 DAT 的主要原因。确定标准的 APD 分类参数和评估没有 DAT 的原因对于优化治疗策略和向 DAT 过渡很重要。