4.6 Article

A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Delayed Start Study to Assess Rasagiline as a Disease Modifying Therapy in Parkinson's Disease (The ADAGIO Study): Rationale, Design, and Baseline Characteristics

Journal

MOVEMENT DISORDERS
Volume 23, Issue 15, Pages 2194-2201

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mds.22218

Keywords

Parkinson's disease; delayed start design; rasagiline; neuroprotection; disease modification

Funding

  1. TEVA Pharmaceutical Industries (Israel)
  2. Teva Neuroscience Inc. (USA)

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A neuroprotective therapy is the single most important unmet medical need in Parkinson's disease. Several promising agents in the laboratory have been tested in the clinic, but none has been established in clinical trials to have a disease modifying effect despite positive results because of potential confounding symptomatic or pharmacologic effects. The delayed start design was developed to try to avoid a symptomatic confound when testing a putative neuroprotective therapy. In this study design, patients are randomly assigned to study drug or placebo in the first phase of the study, and both groups receive the active drug in the second phase. If benefits seen at the end of phase I persist through the end of phase 11, they cannot be readily explained by a symptomatic effect (as patients in both groups are receiving the same medication) and benefits in the early start group must relate to the early initiation of the treatment. Although the precise mechanism responsible for such art effect can be debated, positive results in a delayed start study indicate that patients who receive early treatment have a better outcome than those where the treatment is delayed. We are Using the delayed start design to assess the potential disease modifying effects of rasagiline in a prospective double blind controlled trial (the ADAGIO study). We here describe the rationale for the study and baseline characteristics of the 1,176 patients who have been enrolled into the trial. (C) 2008 Movement Disorder Society

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