Greene Paul E, Fahn Stanley, Eidelberg David, Bjugstad Kimberly B, Breeze Robert E, Freed Curt R
Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.
NPJ Parkinsons Dis. 2021 Apr 23;7(1):38. doi: 10.1038/s41531-021-00183-w.
Cell transplants are being developed for patients with Parkinson disease (PD) who have insufficient benefit with standard medical treatment. We describe the clinical features of five patients who developed persistent dyskinesias after fetal dopaminergic tissue transplantation. All had levodopa-induced dyskinesias preoperatively. We implanted fetal mesencephalic dopaminergic tissue into the putamina bilaterally in 34 patients with advanced PD. They were not immunosuppressed. Five of 34 patients (15%) developed troublesome choreic or dystonic dyskinesias that persisted despite lowering or discontinuing medications. Attempts to treat the involuntary movements with amantadine, clozapine, anticholinergics, dopamine depletors and other medicines had limited success. Metyrosine eliminated dyskinesias but led to the parkinsonian "off" state. Increasing the dose of levodopa worsened the dyskinesias. Three patients required placement of pallidal stimulators, bilaterally in two and unilaterally in one patient who had only contralateral dyskinesias. The two with the bilateral stimulators had improvement in dyskinesias. The patient with the unilateral pallidal stimulator had a substantial reduction of the dyskinesias, but attempts to treat residual "off" symptoms with levodopa were limited by worsening dyskinesias. Although the number of patients developing these persistent dyskinesias was small, these five patients had dramatic improvement after transplant. As a group, they had milder Parkinson signs at baseline and improved to the point of having minimal parkinsonism, with reduction or elimination of levodopa therapy prior to developing persistent dyskinesias. These involuntary movements establish the principle that fetal dopaminergic tissue transplants can mimic the effects of levodopa, not only in reducing bradykinesia, but also in provoking dyskinesias.
针对帕金森病(PD)患者,在标准药物治疗效果不佳时,细胞移植疗法正在研发中。我们描述了5例在接受胎儿多巴胺能组织移植后出现持续性运动障碍的患者的临床特征。所有患者术前均有左旋多巴诱发的运动障碍。我们对34例晚期帕金森病患者双侧壳核植入胎儿中脑多巴胺能组织。他们未接受免疫抑制治疗。34例患者中有5例(15%)出现了令人困扰的舞蹈症或张力障碍性运动障碍,尽管减少或停用了药物,这些运动障碍仍持续存在。尝试使用金刚烷胺、氯氮平、抗胆碱能药物、多巴胺耗竭剂及其他药物治疗不自主运动,效果有限。甲酪氨酸消除了运动障碍,但导致了帕金森病的“关”状态。增加左旋多巴剂量会使运动障碍恶化。3例患者需要植入苍白球刺激器,2例双侧植入,1例仅对侧有运动障碍的患者单侧植入。植入双侧刺激器的2例患者运动障碍有所改善。植入单侧苍白球刺激器的患者运动障碍大幅减轻,但尝试用左旋多巴治疗残余的“关”期症状时,会因运动障碍加重而受限。尽管出现这些持续性运动障碍的患者数量较少,但这5例患者在移植后有显著改善。总体而言,他们基线时帕金森体征较轻,改善到几乎没有帕金森症状的程度,在出现持续性运动障碍之前减少或停用了左旋多巴治疗。这些不自主运动证实了胎儿多巴胺能组织移植不仅能模仿左旋多巴在减轻运动迟缓方面的作用,还能引发运动障碍。