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Randomized Trial of Focused Ultrasound Subthalamotomy for Parkinson’s Disease
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Título : | Randomized Trial of Focused Ultrasound Subthalamotomy for Parkinson’s Disease |
Autor : | Martínez-Fernández, Raúl Máñez-Miró, Jorge Rodríguez Rojas, Rafael Álamo, Marta del Shah, B. B. Hernández-Fernández, Frida Pineda-Pardo, José A. Monje, Mariana H. G. Fernández-Rodríguez, Beatriz Sperling, S. A. Mata-Marín, David Guida, Pasqualina Alonso-Frech, Fernando Obeso Martín, Ignacio Gasca Salas, Carmen Vela Desojo, Lydia Elias, W. J. Obeso Inchausti, José Ángel |
Materias: | Deep-brain stimulation; Parkinson's disease; Focused ultrasound |
Editorial : | Massachusetts Medical Society |
Citación : | Martínez-Fernández R, Máñez-Miró JU, Rodríguez-Rojas R, Del Álamo M, Shah BB, Hernández-Fernández F, Pineda-Pardo JA, Monje MHG, Fernández-Rodríguez B, Sperling SA, Mata-Marín D, Guida P, Alonso-Frech F, Obeso I, Gasca-Salas C, Vela-Desojo L, Elias WJ, Obeso JA. Randomized Trial of Focused Ultrasound Subthalamotomy for Parkinson's Disease. N Engl J Med. 2020 Dec 24;383(26):2501-2513. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2016311. PMID: 33369354. |
Resumen : | BACKGROUND The subthalamic nucleus is the preferred neurosurgical target for deep-brain stimulation to treat cardinal motor features of Parkinson’s disease. Focused ultrasound is an imaging-guided method for creating therapeutic lesions in deep-brain structures, including the subthalamic nucleus. METHODS We randomly assigned, in a 2:1 ratio, patients with markedly asymmetric Parkinson’s disease who had motor signs not fully controlled by medication or who were ineligible for deep-brain stimulation surgery to undergo focused ultrasound subthalamotomy on the side opposite their main motor signs or a sham procedure. The primary efficacy outcome was the between-group difference in the change from baseline to 4 months in the Movement Disorder Society–Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) motor score (i.e., part III) for the more affected body side (range, 0 to 44, with higher scores indicating worse parkinsonism) in the off-medication state. The primary safety outcome (procedure-related complications) was assessed at 4 months. RESULTS Among 40 enrolled patients, 27 were assigned to focused ultrasound subthalamotomy (active treatment) and 13 to the sham procedure (control). The mean MDS-UPDRS III score for the more affected side decreased from 19.9 at baseline to 9.9 at 4 months in the active-treatment group (least-squares mean difference, 9.8 points; 95% confidence interval [CI], 8.6 to 11.1) and from 18.7 to 17.1 in the control group (least-squares mean difference, 1.7 points; 95% CI, 0.0 to 3.5); the between-group difference was 8.1 points (95% CI, 6.0 to 10.3; P<0.001). Adverse events in the active-treatment group were dyskinesia in the off-medication state in 6 patients and in the on-medication state in 6, which persisted in 3 and 1, respectively, at 4 months; weakness on the treated side in 5 patients, which persisted in 2 at 4 months; speech disturbance in 15 patients, which persisted in 3 at 4 months; facial weakness in 3 patients, which persisted in 1 at 4 months; and gait disturbance in 13 patients, which persisted in 2 at 4 months. In 6 patients in the activetreatment group, some of these deficits were present at 12 months. CONCLUSIONS Focused ultrasound subthalamotomy in one hemisphere improved motor features of Parkinson’s disease in selected patients with asymmetric signs. Adverse events included speech and gait disturbances, weakness on the treated side, and dyskinesia. (Funded by Insightec and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03454425.) |
URI : | http://hdl.handle.net/10637/15353 |
Derechos: | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.es |
ISSN : | 0028-4793 |
Fecha de publicación : | 24-dic-2020 |
Centro : | Universidad San Pablo-CEU |
Aparece en las colecciones: | Medicina |
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