Abstract
BackgroundThe burden of Parkinson’s disease (PD) worsens with disease progression. However, the lack of objective and uniform disease classification challenges our understanding of the incremental burden in patients with advanced Parkinson’s disease (APD) and suboptimal medication control. The 5–2-1 criteria was proposed by clinical consensus to identify patients with advancing PD. Our objective was to evaluate the screening accuracy and incremental clinical burden, healthcare resource utilization (HCRU), and humanistic burden in PD patients meeting the 5–2-1 screening criteria.MethodsData were drawn from the Adelphi Parkinson’s Disease Specific Program (DSP™), a multi-country point-in-time survey (2017–2020). People with PD who were naive to device-aided therapy and on oral PD therapy were included. Patients meeting the 5–2-1 screening criteria had one or more of the three clinical indicators of APD: (i) ≥5 doses of oral levodopa/day, OR (ii) “off” symptoms for ≥2 h of waking day, OR (iii) ≥1 h of troublesome dyskinesia. Clinician assessment of PD stage was used as the reference in this study. Clinical screening accuracy of the 5–2-1 criteria was assessed using area under the curve and multivariable logistic regression models. Incremental clinical, HCRU, and humanistic burden were assessed by known-group comparisons between 5 and 2-1-positive and negative patients.ResultsFrom the analytic sample (n = 4714), 33% of patients met the 5–2-1 screening criteria. Among physician-classified APD patients, 78.6% were 5–2-1 positive. Concordance between clinician judgment and 5–2-1 screening criteria was > 75%. 5–2-1-positive patients were nearly 7-times more likely to be classified as APD by physician judgment. Compared with the 5–2-1-negative group, 5–2-1-positive patients had significantly higher clinical, HCRU, and humanistic burden across all measures. In particular, 5–2-1-positive patients had 3.8-times more falls, 3.6-times higher annual hospitalization rate, and 3.4-times greater dissatisfaction with PD treatment. 5–2-1-positive patients also had significantly lower quality of life and worse caregiver burden.Conclusions5–2-1 criteria demonstrated potential as a screening tool for identifying people with APD with considerable clinical, humanistic, and HCRU burden. The 5–2-1 screening criteria is an objective and reliable tool that may aid the timely identification and treatment optimization of patients inadequately controlled on oral PD medications.
Highlights
The burden of Parkinson’s disease (PD) worsens with disease progression
Compared with 5–2-1-negative patients, 5–2-1-positive patients were older, had a longer time since diagnosis, had a higher Hoehn and Yahr (H&Y) stage, and were more often classified as having advanced Parkinson’s disease (APD) by their physician (Table 1). 5–2-1 positive patients had a higher Charlson Comorbidity Index, the observed difference being informed by a greater prevalence of cardiovascular conditions, diabetes, and dementia (Supplementary Table 1)
A comparable analysis carried out using H&Y stages (H&Y stage 1–2 vs H&Y stage 3–5) in place of physician judgement, and the outcome was similar (Supplementary Table 2)
Summary
The lack of objec‐ tive and uniform disease classification challenges our understanding of the incremental burden in patients with advanced Parkinson’s disease (APD) and suboptimal medication control. Progress in APD management has been impeded by a lack of objective and standardized diagnostic criteria to identify patients with advanced disease in clinical practice. This is further compounded by the complexity and heterogeneity of PD symptoms, making timely and accurate patient identification even more challenging [4]. A uniform set of criteria for rapidly identifying APD is urgently required to screen for patients with suboptimal symptom control [4, 6,7,8]
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