Real-World Use of COMT Inhibitors in the Management of Patients with Parkinson’s Disease in Spain Who Present Early Motor Fluctuations: Interim Results from the REONPARK Study

Other authors

[López-Manzanares L] Unidad de Trastornos de Movimiento, Servicio de Neurología, Hospital Universitario de La Princesa, Madrid, Spain. [García Caldentey J] Servei de Neurologia, Hospital Quirónsalud Palmaplanas i Clínica Rotger, Palma de Mallorca, Spain. [Mata Álvarez-Santullano M] Servicio de Neurología, Hospital Universitario Infanta Sofía, Madrid, Spain. [Vilas Rolán D] Servei de Neurologia, Universitat Hospital Germans Trias i Pujol, Barcelona, Spain. [Herreros-Rodríguez J] Unidad de Trastornos de Movimiento, Servicio de Neurología, Hospital Universitario Infanta Leonor, Madrid, Spain. [Solano Vila B] l Servei de Neurologia, Hospital Universitari de Girona Doctor Josep Trueta, Hospital de Santa Caterina de Salt (IAS), Girona, Spain

Institut d'Assistència Sanitària

Publication date

2025-12-03T12:44:19Z

2025-12-03T12:44:19Z

2025-05-21

Abstract

COMT-inhibitors; Early fluctuations; Parkinson’s disease


Inhibidors COMT; Malaltia de Parkinson; Fluctuacions motores


Inhibidores COMT; Enfermedad de Parkinson; Fluctuaciones motoras


Objective: We aimed to analyze the real-world use of COMT inhibitors associated with levodopa in patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) who present early fluctuations and to explore whether early COMT inhibition optimizes treatment outcomes. Methods: REONPARK is an ongoing 2-year prospective observational study. We included patients diagnosed with PD who presented signs of end-of-dose motor fluctuations for <2 years and started COMT inhibitors according to clinical practice. Outcomes included the clinician and patient global impression of change (CGI-C, PGI-C), the Movement Disorder Society-sponsored revision of the Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS), the Parkinson’s Disease Questionnaire-8 (PDQ-8), Non-Motor Symptoms Scale (NMSS), 19-Symptom Wearing-off Questionnaire (WOQ-19), and safety. We present a pre-planned interim analysis (cut-off date 3 July 2023) of patients who completed the first 3 months of follow-up. Results: Seventy patients were analyzed (mean levodopa dose at inclusion 484.8 mg; duration of motor fluctuations 0.6 years). In all cases, COMT inhibition was initiated with opicapone, and 81% maintained a stable levodopa dose at 3 months. After 3 months of treatment with opicapone, 73.5% and 62.8% of patients improved on CGI-C and PGI-C, respectively. MDS-UPDRS scores improved significantly with a mean change from baseline of −3.3 ± 7.7 (p < 0.001) for Part III and −1.3 ± 1.7 (p < 0.001) for Part IV. The mean OFF time decreased from 3.7 ± 2.6 h at baseline to 2.2 ± 2.3 h, and 20.6% of patients no longer experienced OFF periods. Patients experiencing no impact of fluctuations increased from 10% to 45.6%. Conclusions: In PD patients with early fluctuations, three months of opicapone reduced the OFF time and improved functional outcomes, suggesting potential benefits in the early stages.


This research was funded by Laboratorios Bial S.A.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

MDPI

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Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/

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