Abstract

BackgroundParkinson’s disease (PD) is a prevalent and debilitating condition. Conventional medications cannot control all symptoms and may inflict adverse effects. A survey reported that Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) is frequently sought. Existing CHM trials were contradictory and often of poor quality due to lack of methodological rigor. A national clinical guideline was drafted in China with diagnostic criteria and treatment strategy of Chinese medicine (CM) patterns subgroups of PD. The suggested CHM were found to exhibit neuroprotective effect in in vitro and in vivo studies. This trial aims to preliminarily assess the effect of CHM prescribed based on pattern differentiation on PD symptoms and patients’ quality of life, and evaluate the feasibility of the trial design for a future large-scale trial.MethodsThis trial will be a pilot assessor- and data analyst blind, add-on, randomised, controlled, pragmatic clinical trial. 160 PD patients will be recruited and randomised into treatment or control groups in a 1:1 ratio. The trial will be conducted over 32 weeks. PD patients in the treatment group will be stratified into subgroups based on CM pattern and receive CHM accordingly in addition to conventional medication (ConM). The control group will receive ConM only. The primary outcome will be part II of the Movement Disorder Society Sponsored Revision of Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS). Secondary outcomes will include part and total scores of MDS-UPDRS, domain and total scores of Non-motor symptom scale (NMSS). Adverse events will be monitored by monthly follow-ups and questionnaires. Mixed models will be used to analyse data by Jamovi and R.Expected outcomesThe success of our trial will show that the pragmatic design with subgroup differentiation is feasible and can produce reliable results. It will also provide preliminary data of the effect of CHM on improving clinical outcomes and quality of PD patients. Data collected will be used to optimize study design of the future large-scale clinical study.Ethical clearanceEthical clearance of this study was given by the Research Ethics Committee of Hong Kong Baptist University (REC/20-21/0206).Trial registration This trial is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05001217, Date: 8/10/2021, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05001217). Type of manuscript: clinical trial protocol (date: 3rd November, 2021, version 1)

Highlights

  • Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a prevalent and debilitating condition

  • Motor and non-motor symptoms (MS and Non-motor symptoms (NMS)) are the two main categories of clinical presentations of PD that affect the quality of life of PD patients [2,3,4]

  • Our study aims to evaluate the feasibility and preliminarily assess the effectiveness of integrative medicine treatment combining Conventional medicine (ConM) and Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) in improving clinical outcomes and quality of life of PD patients

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Summary

Introduction

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a prevalent and debilitating condition. Conventional medications cannot control all symptoms and may inflict adverse effects. The suggested CHM were found to exhibit neuroprotective effect in in vitro and in vivo studies. This trial aims to preliminarily assess the effect of CHM prescribed based on pattern differentiation on PD symptoms and patients’ quality of life, and evaluate the feasibility of the trial design for a future large-scale trial. Motor and non-motor symptoms (MS and NMS) are the two main categories of clinical presentations of PD that affect the quality of life of PD patients [2,3,4]. Conventional medicine (ConM), including medications such as Levodopa and dopamine agonists, is effective in improving motor function, but not postural and gait problems nor most NMS [5, 6]. Some patients seek complementary and alternative therapies (CATs) in the hope to improve their conditions

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