Medline ® Abstracts for References 37,66,67
of 'Treatment of restless legs syndrome/Willis-Ekbom disease and periodic limb movement disorder in adults'
37
TI
Treatment of moderate to severe restless legs syndrome: 2-year safety and efficacy of rotigotine transdermal patch.
AU
Högl B, Oertel WH, Stiasny-Kolster K, Geisler P, BenešH, García-Borreguero D, Trenkwalder C, Poewe W, Schollmayer E, Kohnen R
SO
BMC Neurol. 2010;10:86. Epub 2010 Sep 28.
BACKGROUND:
Rotigotine is a unique dopamine agonist with activity across D1 through D5 receptors as well as select adrenergic and serotonergic sites. This study reports the 2-year follow-up safety and efficacy data of an ongoing open-label multicenter extension study (NCT00498186) of transdermal rotigotine in patients with moderate to severe restless legs syndrome (RLS).
METHODS:
Patients received a once-daily patch application of an individually optimized dose of rotigotine between 0.5 mg/24 h to 4 mg/24 h. Safety assessments included adverse events (AEs) and efficacy was measured by the International RLS Study Group Severity Rating Scale (IRLS), RLS-6 scales and Clinical Global Impression (CGI). Quality of life (QoL) was measured by QoL-RLS.
RESULTS:
Of 310 patients who completed a 6-week placebo-controlled trial (SP709), 295 (mean age 58±10 years, 66% females) were included in the open-label trial SP710. 64.7% (190/295 patients) completed the 2-year follow-up; 29 patients discontinued during the second year. Mean daily rotigotine dose after 2 years was 2.93±1.14 mg/24 h with a 2.9% dose increase from year 1. Rotigotine was generally well tolerated. The rate of typical dopaminergic side effects, nausea and fatigue, was low (0.9% and 2.3%, respectively) during the second year; application site reactions were frequent but lower than in year 1 (16.4% vs. 34.5%). The IRLS total score improved from baseline of SP709 (27.8±5.9) by 17.2±9.2 in year 2 completers. Similar improvements were observed in RLS-6 scales, CGI scores and QoL-RLS. The responder rate in the CGI change item 2 ("much" and "very much" improved) was 95% after year 2.
CONCLUSIONS:
Transdermal rotigotine is an efficacious and well-tolerated long-term treatment option for patients with moderate to severe RLS with a high retention rate during 2 years of therapy.
TRIAL REGISTRATION:
NCT00498186.
AD
Department of Neurology, Innsbruck Medical University, Innsbruck, Austria. birgit.ho@i-med.ac.at
PMID
66
TI
Efficacy, safety and risk of augmentation of rotigotine for treating restless legs syndrome.
AU
Inoue Y, Hirata K, Hayashida K, Hattori N, Tomida T, Garcia-Borreguero D, Rotigotine Study Group
SO
Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2013 Jan;40:326-33. Epub 2012 Oct 25.
The present study aimed to examine the long-term efficacy and safety of rotigotine treatment for restless legs syndrome (RLS), as well as the rate of clinically significant augmentation, in a 1-year open-label study of Japanese subjects. Japanese patients with RLS who had been treated with rotigotine or placebo in a double-blind trial were enrolled in a 1-year, open-label, uncontrolled extension study and treated with rotigotine at a dose of up to 3 mg/24 h after an 8-week titration phase. Outcomes included International Restless Legs Syndrome Study Group rating scale (IRLS scale), Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), safety, and investigator-/expert panel-assessed augmentation (including Augmentation Severity Rating Scale). Overall, 185 patients entered the open-label study and 133 completed the study. IRLS and PSQI total scores improved throughout the 52-week treatment period (IRLS, from 23.2±5.1 to 7.8±7.6 and PSQI, from 8.0±3.1 to 5.0±2.9). Treatment-emergent adverse events were mild to moderate in severity, and included application site reactions (52.4%) and nausea (28.6%). Clinically significant augmentation occurred in five patients (2.7%). These results indicate a good long-term efficacy of rotigotine for treating RLS, with a relatively low risk of clinically significant augmentation.
AD
Department of Somnology, Tokyo Medical University, 6-1-1 Shinjuku, Tokyo 160-8402, Japan. inoue@somnology.com
PMID
67
TI
Augmentation in the treatment of restless legs syndrome with transdermal rotigotine.
AU
BenešH, García-Borreguero D, Ferini-Strambi L, Schollmayer E, Fichtner A, Kohnen R
SO
Sleep Med. 2012 Jun;13(6):589-97. Epub 2012 Apr 13.
OBJECTIVE:
To assess the risk of augmentation under treatment with the transdermally delivered dopamine agonist rotigotine for restless legs syndrome (RLS).
METHODS:
Experts in RLS augmentation retrospectively reviewed data from two double-blind, placebo-controlled 6-month trials (745 rotigotine and 214 placebo subjects, NCT00136045 and NCT00135993) and from two open-label 1-year trials (620 rotigotine subjects, NCT00498108 and NCT00263068). All study visits were systematically evaluated applying the Max Planck Institute (MPI) criteria for the diagnosis of both augmentation and clinically relevant augmentation.
RESULTS:
MPI criteria for augmentation were met on at least one visit by 8.2% of all subjects in the double-blind trials with 12 subjects meeting the criteria for clinically relevant augmentation: 11 under rotigotine (1.5%) and one under placebo treatment. In the open-label trials, 9.7% of all subjects met the MPI criteria for augmentation and 2.9% met the criteria for clinically relevant augmentation. None of the patients treated with rotigotine for up to 1.5 years (double-blind plus open-label trial) discontinued prematurely owing to augmentation. Neither could dose-dependency or a time pattern for clinically relevant augmentation episodes be detected.
CONCLUSIONS:
Our analyses suggest that the risk for clinically relevant augmentation for the duration of up to 18 months of rotigotine treatment is low.
AD
Somni bene Institute for Clinical Research and Sleep Medicine, Goethestr. 1, 19053 Schwerin, Germany.
PMID
