Artigo Revisado por pares

Dextromethorphan Plus Ultra Low‐Dose Quinidine Reduces Pseudobulbar Affect

2010; Wiley; Volume: 68; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1002/ana.22093

ISSN

1531-8249

Autores

Erik P. Pioro, Benjamin Rix Brooks, Jeffrey L. Cummings, Randolph B. Schiffer, Ronald A. Thisted, Daniel Wynn, Adrian Hepner, Randall Kaye,

Tópico(s)

Parkinson's Disease Mechanisms and Treatments

Resumo

Abstract Objective To evaluate dextromethorphan combined with ultra low‐dose quinidine (DMq) for treating pseudobulbar affect (PBA) in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) or multiple sclerosis (MS). Methods In a 12‐week randomized, double‐blind trial, ALS and MS patients with clinically significant PBA (a baseline score ≥13 on the Center for Neurologic Studies–Lability Scale [CNS‐LS]) were maintained, twice daily, on placebo, DMq at 30/10mg (DMq‐30), or DMq at 20/10mg (DMq‐20). Results In 326 randomized patients (of whom 283, or 86.8%, completed the study), the PBA‐episode daily rate was 46.9% ( p < 0.0001) lower for DMq‐30 than for placebo and 49.0% ( p < 0.0001) lower for DMq‐20 than for placebo by longitudinal negative binomial regression, the prespecified primary analysis. Mean CNS‐LS scores decreased by 8.2 points for DMq‐30 and 8.2 for DMq‐20, vs 5.7 for placebo ( p = 0.0002 and p = 0.0113, respectively). Other endpoints showing statistically significant DMq benefit included, for both dosage levels, the likelihood of PBA remission during the final 14 days and, for the higher dosage, improvement on measures of social functioning and mental health. Both dosages were safe and well tolerated. Interpretation DMq markedly reduced PBA frequency and severity, decreasing the condition's detrimental impact on a patient's life, with satisfactory safety and high tolerability. The findings expand the clinical evidence that DMq may be an important treatment for patients suffering from the socially debilitating symptoms of PBA. Ann Neurol 2010

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