Abstract

A prodromal phase of Parkinson’s disease (PD) may precede motor manifestations by decades. PD patients’ siblings are at higher risk for PD, but the prevalence and distribution of prodromal symptoms are unknown. The study objectives were (1) to assess motor and non-motor features estimating prodromal PD probability in PD siblings recruited within the European PROPAG-AGEING project; (2) to compare motor and non-motor symptoms to the well-established DeNoPa cohort. 340 PD siblings from three sites (Bologna, Seville, Kassel/Goettingen) underwent clinical and neurological evaluations of PD markers. The German part of the cohort was compared with German de novo PD patients (dnPDs) and healthy controls (CTRs) from DeNoPa. Fifteen (4.4%) siblings presented with subtle signs of motor impairment, with MDS-UPDRS-III scores not clinically different from CTRs. Symptoms of orthostatic hypotension were present in 47 siblings (13.8%), no different to CTRs (p = 0.072). No differences were found for olfaction and overall cognition; German-siblings performed worse than CTRs in visuospatial-executive and language tasks. 3/147 siblings had video-polysomnography-confirmed REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD), none was positive on the RBD Screening Questionnaire. 173/300 siblings had <1% probability of having prodromal PD; 100 between 1 and 10%, 26 siblings between 10 and 80%, one fulfilled the criteria for prodromal PD. According to the current analysis, we cannot confirm the increased risk of PD siblings for prodromal PD. Siblings showed a heterogeneous distribution of prodromal PD markers and probability. Additional parameters, including strong disease markers, should be investigated to verify if these results depend on validity and sensitivity of prodromal PD criteria, or if siblings’ risk is not elevated.

Highlights

  • Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most frequent neurodegenerative disease with a prevalence of 50–300 per 100,000 for all ages, the incidence ranges from 10 to 30 per 100,000 person-years in western countries[1]

  • Alcohol and coffee consumption were more frequent among German Sibs (57.7% and 88.2%, respectively), while Spanish Sibs had the highest per capita alcohol daily dose (20.51 ± 20.92 g/day; p < 0.001)

  • DeNoPa PDs presented with a higher BMI than German Sibs (p = 0.001)

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Summary

Introduction

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most frequent neurodegenerative disease with a prevalence of 50–300 per 100,000 for all ages, the incidence ranges from 10 to 30 per 100,000 person-years in western countries[1]. Both prevalence and incidence increase nearly exponentially with age and peak at 6% after the age of 802,3. A prodromal phase of PD, characterized by a variety of nonmotor symptoms (NMS), may precede the motor manifestation of the disease by years or even decades. NMS are present in the elderly general population as well, but a combination of two or more NMS increases the risk of developing PD, especially if combined with subtle motor impairment[16,17,18]

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