4.5 Article

Shaping the course of early-onset Parkinson's disease: insights from a longitudinal cohort

Journal

NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 44, Issue 9, Pages 3151-3159

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG ITALIA SRL
DOI: 10.1007/s10072-023-06826-5

Keywords

Early-onset Parkinson's disease; Young-onset Parkinson's disease; Progression; Gender; Hoehn and Yahr; LEDD; Motor fluctuations

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This article examines the clinical presentation and progression of early-onset Parkinson's disease (EOPD). The results show that EOPD primarily manifests as an asymmetric, rigid-akinetic motor syndrome. The study also found that the disease gradually progresses over a 10-year period and is influenced by gender.
IntroductionEarly-onset Parkinson's disease (EOPD) labels those cases with onset earlier than fifty. Although peculiarities emerged either in clinical or pathological features, EOPD is managed alike typical, late-onset PD. A customized approach would be, instead, better appropriate. Accordingly, a deeper characterization of the clinical course, with an estimation of the disease progression rate, the therapy flow, and the main motor and non-motor complications occurrence, is needed.MethodsA longitudinal cohort of 193 EOPD patients (selected on a single-centre population of 2000 PD cases) was retrospectively analysed, providing descriptive statics on a series of clinical parameters (genetics, phenotype, comorbidities, therapies, motor and non-motor complications, marital and gender issues) and modelling the trajectories from diagnosis to 10 years later of both Hoehn and Yahr (H&Y) stage and levodopa equivalent daily dose (LEDD).ResultsEOPD had a prevalence of 9.7%, including few monogenic cases. It mostly appeared as a motor syndrome, with asymmetric, rigid-akinetic presentation. H&Y linearly progressed with an increment of 0.92 points/10 years; LEDD flow had a non-linear trend, increasing of 526.90 mg/day in 0-5 years, and 166.83 mg/day in 5-10 years. Motor fluctuations started 6.5 +/- 3.2 years from onset, affecting up to 80% of the cohort. Neuropsychiatric troubles interested the 50%, sexual complaints the 12%. Gender-specific motor disturbances emerged.ConclusionWe shaped EOPD course, modelling a brain-first PD subtype, slowly progressive, with non-linear dopaminergic requirement. Major burden mostly resulted from motor fluctuations, neuropsychiatric complications, sexual and marital complaints, with a considerable gender-effect.

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