Amongst the nonmotor symptoms (NMS) of Parkinson’s disease (PD), sleep disturbances is the most frequent and occurs in 37% to 98% of patients.Reference Chaudhuri and Odin 1 - Reference Tandberg, Larsen and Karlsen 5 Sleep disturbances in PD may be linked to resurgence of PD symptoms, anxiety, nocturia, PD medications, or an actual sleep disorder.Reference Verbaan, van Rooden, Visser, Marinus and van Hilten 6 Insomnia is the most common sleep problem in PD. Sleep disturbances in patients with PD has been associated with reduced quality of life.Reference Barone, Antonini and Colosimo 2 , Reference Chaudhuri, Martinez-Martin and Rofle 7 , Reference Gallagher, Lees and Schrag 8
The treatment of sleep disturbances in PD is largely unstudied. Doxepin was recently shown to improve insomnia.Reference Rios Romenets, Creti and Fichten 9 The effects of levodopa on sleep are conflicting, with studies demonstrating a frequent disruption in sleep,Reference Nausieda, Weiner, Kaplan, Weber and Klawans 10 , Reference Antczak, Rakowicz and Banach 11 and another showing an improvement in sleep.Reference Askenasy and Yahr 12 Dopaminergic agonists, anticholinergics, selegiline, and amantadine are also known to affect night-time sleep.Reference Adler and Thorpy 13 , Reference Chahine, Daley and Horn 14 Recent reports have shown that anti-Parkinson therapies can help nocturnal sleep disturbances in PD.Reference Trenkwalder, Kies and Rudzinska 15 - Reference Amara, Standaert and Guthrie 23
Rasagiline, a selective irreversible inhibitor of the MAO-B enzyme, is a well-established treatment for PD, either as a monotherapy or adjunct therapy. 24 - Reference Olanow, Hauser and Jankovic 27 The effect of rasagiline on sleep was assessed in an observational 8-week study (n=26)Reference Müller, Klasser, Rieke, Ries, Schwartz and Ehret 28 and showed not statistically significant improvement in PD Sleep Scale (PDSS) total score. Switching patients from selegiline to rasagiline significantly improved sleep in PD patients.Reference Müller, Hoffmann, Dimpfel and Oehlwein 29
This study aimed to further evaluate the effects of rasagiline on the quality of sleep using the validated PDSS as the primary outcome measure.
Methods
Patients
Sixteen centres in Canada participated between December 2009 and March 2011. Eligible candidates were patients with a diagnosis of idiopathic PD who had not used selegiline or rasagiline within 60 days before study entry. Rasagiline was prescribed to all patients, either as monotherapy or adjunct therapy. The study was approved by ethics committees, and all patients provided written informed consent before enrolment. This study has been registered on clinicaltrials.org under the number NCT01032486.
Design
This was a single arm, open-label, multicentre study. Patients were followed prospectively during the 2-month study period while treated with a daily dose of rasagiline (0.5 mg or 1.0 mg). Rasagiline could be up-titrated (0.5 mg to 1.0 mg) or down-titrated (1.0 mg to 0.5 mg), as per physician discretion during the 60-day period of the study. This study was not intended to examine a dose-response relationship.
Timeline and Clinical Assessments
Demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients were recorded at study entry. Baseline assessments included the PDSS, the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS), and the Hoehn and Yahr staging scale (H&Y). The end of study visit, at month 2, included administration of the PDSS, ESS, and Clinical Global Impression of Improvement (CGI-I), Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication (TSQM), assessment of treatment compliance by patient report, and safety and tolerability.
Assessment of Nocturnal Symptoms
The PDSS is a self-administered questionnaire designed to evaluate the frequency and specific nature of sleep disturbances experienced during the week preceding administration.Reference Chaudhuri, Pal and DiMarco 30 The scale consists in eight subscales: overall quality of sleep (Q1); sleep onset and maintenance insomnia (Q2, Q3); nocturnal restlessness (Q4, Q5); nocturnal psychosis (Q6, Q7); nocturia (Q8, Q9); nocturnal motor symptoms (Q10-Q13); sleep refreshment (Q14); and daytime dozing (Q15). The severity of each symptom is measured on a visual analog scale, ranging from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating a better quality of sleep.
The ESS is a self-administered, eight-item questionnaire designed to measure a patients’ general level of daytime sleepiness.Reference Johns 31 , Reference Johns 32 Higher éESS scores indicate a higher level of daytime sleepiness.
The CGI-I is a brief clinician-rated instrument, which provides an estimate of the patient’s overall improvement or deterioration over time.Reference Forkmann, Scherer, Boecker, Pawelzik, Jostes and Gauggel 33
The TSQM (version 1.4) is a self-administered, 14-item general measure of patients’ satisfaction with medication.Reference Atkinson, Sinha and Hass 34
The H&Y allows a staging of parkinsonism that is in keeping with the natural evolution of the disease and is independent of response to therapy (fluctuations).
Statistical Analysis
The primary endpoint was the change from baseline to month 2 in total PDSS score. The secondary endpoint was the change from baseline to month 2 in the ESS score. Exploratory endpoints included change from baseline to month 2 in the subscales of the PDSS and in the other scales. Safety and tolerability were measured by incidence of adverse events (AEs), serious AEs, premature discontinuation of rasagiline overall, and discontinuation because of AEs.
A sample size of 119 patients was determined to detect a 10% difference between baseline and end of study in total PDSS, with a power of 80% and a 5% two-sided significance threshold. A difference of 10% between baseline and month 2 was considered to be clinically significant based on previous studies.Reference Chaudhuri, Martinez-Martin and Rofle 7 , Reference Müller, Klasser, Rieke, Ries, Schwartz and Ehret 28 This estimation assumes a baseline PDSS score of 100, standard deviation (SD) of 34, and a 10% drop out rate.Reference Chaudhuri, Martinez-Martin and Rofle 7 , Reference Chaudhuri, Pal and DiMarco 30 , Reference Abe, Hikita and Sakoda 35 A correction by a factor of 1.157 was introduced into the estimate to account for the possibility of a non-normal distribution, requiring use of a Wilcoxon signed-rank test. All results were analyzed in the modified intention-to-treat (mITT) population, defined as all patients who enrolled in the study and had both a baseline and month 2 (end of study) visits.
Demographic and baseline characteristics of the ITT population were presented descriptively. Change in PDSS total and subscale scores at month 2 was assessed using a Wilcoxon signed-rank test to test the hypothesis of no difference in median PDSS scores from baseline to end of study. Shapiro-Wilk tests were conducted to verify the normality of the distribution and a paired t-test was conducted under conditions of a normal distribution, as supportive analysis. The ESS total and the ESS subscales were tested in a similar manner.
The CGI-I and TSQM assessment scales were reported with descriptive statistics on their total scores.
A post hoc analysis was conducted in which patients were classified as having mild or troublesome sleep disturbances using the median PDSS score at baseline as the cutoff value. This subgroup analysis was conducted for the total PDSS score as well as for each of the subscales. Subscales scores were differentiated by <5 and ≥5, indicating troublesome and mild sleep problems, respectively. Post hoc analysis of change in total ESS score stratified by mean baseline ESS score (<4.6= mild daytime sleepiness vs ≥4.6= troublesome daytime sleepiness) was also conducted and reported descriptively.
The statistical design and analysis was performed using SAS, version 9.2.
Results
Patient Disposition
A total of 120 patients were enrolled in the study; 110 received rasagiline. Reasons for nontreatment were withdrawal of consent (n=5), physician decision (n=1), noncompliance of study requirement (n=1), and other (n=3). Overall, 97 (88%) of the treated patients completed the study. The most common reason for premature discontinuation in 13 patients (11.8%) was due to AEs (n=11, 10%). One (<1%) patient discontinued by stopping medication permanently on day 2 of the study and another withdrew consent (n=1, <1%). One patient was excluded from the primary analysis of PDSS and four patients were excluded from the ESS analysis because missing data.
Baseline Characteristics
The mean [SD] age of the 110 patients was 67 [9.4] years and 75% were male. Participants were diagnosed with PD a median (range) of 3 (0-28) years before enrolment and the majority of patients were in H&Y 1 to 1.5 or 2 to 2.5 (i.e. bilateral symptoms with or without postural instability). The majority of patients were on adjunct therapy. The ITT and mITT groups were similar with the exception that nine patients in the ITT population and two from the mITT population missed >15 doses (Table 1).
* Rasagiline dose prescribed at baseline.
Sleep Disturbances
PDSS
Sleep disturbances improved significantly after 2 months of treatment as assessed by the PDSS (Table 2). At baseline, total mean [SD] PDSS score was 96.2 [21.6], which improved to 105.5 (21.9) at month 2, (mean [SD] improvement of 9.11 [18.69] points, p=0.003). The primary endpoint of this study was met and was confirmed by a paired t-test analysis.
* Wilcoxon signed-rank test for median change from baseline to month 2, mITT population.
† n=94, 2 patients had missing data to ≥1 question.
‡ n=95, 1 patient had missing data to ≥1 question.
Results with the subscales of the PDSS are shown in Table 2.
The subscales that were the most troublesome for patients at baseline were sleep refreshment, overall quality of sleep, nocturia, and daytime dozing (visual analog scale scores <6). Nocturnal psychosis and nocturnal motor symptoms were the least troubling at baseline (visual analog scale scores >7).
The mean [SD] ESS score improved slightly over the study, from 10 [5.2] at baseline to 9.4 [5.0] at month 2 (p=0.4407).
Overall, patients were satisfied with rasagiline treatment with a mean [SD] TSQM total score at month 2 of 68% [16.1]. Patients were more satisfied with rasagiline in terms of convenience (82.3% [16.3]) and side effects (85.4% [23.8]) than effectiveness (53.9% [20.1]) or global satisfaction (51% [24.6]).
On the CGI-I at month 2, 64 (65.9%) patients were judged by the investigator as being at least minimally improved from baseline and 27 [27.8%] were reported to have had no change. Only six patients (6.2%) worsened.
A post-hoc analysis of change in PDSS total score, stratified by median baseline PDSS score (96.9 points), was conducted. Both groups of patients, those with troublesome (PDSS <96.9) and mild (PDSS ≥96.9) sleep disturbances had statistically significant improvements at month 2. The treatment effect at month 2 for the PDSS total score was larger for patients with troublesome sleep disturbances (12 points, median % change 15.6, p=0.0013) than for patients with mild sleep disturbances (5.9 points, median percent change 5.2, p=0.0099) at baseline.
The change in each of the PDSS subscales, stratified by baseline score (<5, ≥5), was significant (p < 0.05) at month 2 for patients with troublesome sleep disturbances (<5). Patients with mild sleep disturbances (≥5) did not experience the same statistical improvement in any of the subscales, with the exception of nocturnal motor symptoms, which was significantly improved (p < 0.05).
Safety
Forty-two (38.2%) patients reported at least one treatment emergent AE during the study. The most common AEs reported were nausea (n=6, 5.5%), dizziness (n=4, 3.6%), constipation (n=3, 2.7%), diarrhea (n=3, 2.7%), visual hallucination (n=3, 2.7%), and somnolence (n=3, 2.7%). Most events were mild or moderate in nature and all, with the exception of dizziness and diarrhea, were considered to be possibly related to rasagiline. Serious AEs occurred in three (2.7%) patients and were contributory to the discontinuation of rasagiline treatment: one patient died of a heart condition of unknown etiology on day 31 of the study and was deemed not related to rasagiline; another patient experienced a severe fall on day 9 of the study, for which she was hospitalized and which was assessed as being possibly related to rasagiline; and the third patient was diagnosed with prostate cancer on day 25, not related to study drug. A total of 13 (12%) patients discontinued rasagiline because of an AE (including the three serious AEs). The only AE leading to drug discontinuation occurring in >1 patient was dizziness, which occurred in 2 patients. Eleven (10%) of the AEs leading to drug discontinuation were considered possibly related to rasagiline.
Discussion
We found that rasagiline is effective at improving the quality of sleep in patients with idiopathic PD. Over 2 months, patients taking rasagiline, as monotherapy or adjunct therapy, experienced significant decreases in overall sleep disturbances and improvements in quality of sleep, nocturnal restlessness, nocturnal motor symptoms, and sleep refreshment. In addition, the majority of patients were satisfied with the medication, in particular for its manageable side effect profile and convenience. Sixty-six percent of patients showed improvement over the 2-month treatment period as per physician rating on the CGI.
No new safety issues emerged from this study and AEs were typically mild or moderate in nature.
Although there were no specific measures to assess the mechanism by which rasagiline improves sleep quality, it is likely that its irreversible MAO-B inhibition extends its benefits overnight.Reference Chen and Swope 36 , Reference Thebault and Guillaume 37 The majority of sleep disturbances associated with PD are due to reemergence of parkinsonian symptoms during the night. Rasagiline was shown to improve motor scores during the “practically defined OFF state” indicating that once-daily treatment with rasagiline exerts a continuous clinical effect of ≥24 hours.Reference Stocchi and Rabey 38 Other long-acting dopaminergic drugs, levodopa/carbidopa infusion technique, and deep brain surgery have shown similar effects in populations affected with similar sleep scores.Reference Trenkwalder, Kies and Rudzinska 15 - Reference Amara, Standaert and Guthrie 23
We also found that patients’ sleep symptoms respond differentially to rasagiline, based on their severity. Troublesome sleep problems, defined by the median PDSS total score (≤96), conferred large improvements, whereas milder sleep problems (PDSS >96) showed smaller, although still statistically significant, improvements. Although four of the subscales of the PDSS were significantly improved at month 2 for the total study population, all eight subscales were improved for patients with troublesome sleep disturbances. Only one subscale, nocturnal motor symptoms, was significantly improved for patients with mild or no sleep disturbances at baseline. This may be due to a ceiling effect, in that patients with mild symptoms have little room for improvement, whereas those with troublesome symptoms and a lower baseline PDSS score have room to improve. Patients with mild sleep disturbance at baseline had a median (range) of 110.8 (96.9-144.5) points on total PDSS, which improved to 119.9 (80.2-149.0) at month 2, which approximates the mean of 120 on total PDSS seen in healthy populations.Reference Chaudhuri, Pal and DiMarco 30 , Reference Abe, Hikita and Sakoda 35 Patients with troublesome nocturnal symptoms at baseline had a median total PDSS score of 84.3 (27.8-96.8), which improved to 94.7 (36.5-126.2) at month 2.
Assessing treatment effects by severity of sleep disturbances at baseline was also studied by Chaudhuri.Reference Chaudhuri, Martinez-Martin and Rofle 7 Similarly, they found patients with troublesome nocturnal symptoms responded more favourably to ropinirole versus placebo, whereas patients with mild-no nocturnal symptoms showed no treatment effect.
Limitations
This study used an uncontrolled open-label design, thus it is not possible to conclude that the patients would not have experienced an improved quality of sleep in the absence of rasagiline. Also, with this type of protocol design, it is impossible to quantify the placebo effect. However, given the progressive nature of PD symptoms, it is unlikely that patients would experience an improvement of this magnitude spontaneously. More than 85% of patients were on adjunct therapy. This may affect the generalizability of the study results to patients on monotherapy, however, no difference in PDSS total score was found when stratified by rasagiline monotherapy versus adjunct therapy.
In summary, this open-label study demonstrates that rasagiline improves sleep experience in patients with idiopathic PD in the short term. These encouraging results might stimulate future research with a double-blind, randomized study design.
Acknowledgements and Funding
The authors thank Marie-Claude Guertin and Mariève Cossette of the Montreal Heart Institute Coordinating Center for statistical analysis. The authors also thank Lyne Jean for administrative and secretarial support.
This study was funded by TEVA Canada Innovation.
Disclosures
MP has received honoraria from TEVA, Novartis, Allergan, and Merz. J-LS and MB were employees of TEVA Canada Innovation and received an annual salary; they held stock options from TEVA Canada Innovation. J-LS is an employee of Novartis Pharma Canada and receives a salary. GL was an employee of TEVA Canada Innovation during the time this study was conducted. DC has received financial compensation for the drafting of the manuscript. SC has been a consultant for and has received honoraria from TEVA, Novartis, Allergan, Merz, and Abbott.
Author Contributions
MP, J-LS, MB, and GL contributed to the design and conceptualization of the study, and interpretation of data; Donna Coffin, MSc: wrote first draft of manuscript and interpretation of data; and SC contributed to the design and conceptualization of the study, and interpretation of data.
Appendix 1
Co-Investigators:
Richard Leckey, MD (Parkland Medical Clinic, Halifax, NS); André F. Gagnon, MD (Polyclinique de Trois-Rivières, Trois-Rivières, QC); Stéphanie Jacques, MD (Cabinet médical spécialisé États d’Esprit, Rouyn-Noranda, QC); Xuan Khoa Phan, MD (Centre médical Pierre-Boucher, Longueuil, QC); Robert Filiatrault, MD (Clinique Neuro Rive-Sud, Greenfield Park, QC); Hyman Rabinovitch, MD (Nepean Medical Centre, Ottawa, ON); François Jacques, MD (Clinique Neuro-Outaouais, Gatineau, QC); Sherali Esmail, MD (North York, ON); Dwight Stewart, MD (Kitchener, ON); Mélanie Langlois, MD (Hôpital de l’enfant-Jésus, Québec, QC); Roberto Giaccone, MD (Ottawa, ON); Louise Roux, MD (Clinique Médicale D’Amos, Amos, QC), Paul A. Hwang, MD (Toronto, ON); Michel Beaudry, MD (Clinique de Neurologie, Chicoutimi, QC); Léo Berger, MD (Clinique Neuro Rive-Sud, Greenfield Park, QC); Emmanuelle Pourcher, MD (Clinique Sainte-Anne “Mémoire et Mouvement,” Ste Foy, QC).