Dose response and concentration response relationship of apomorphine in patients with parkinson's disease and end-of-dose akinesia
1998
The motor response and the PK-PD relationship of the dopamine agonist, apomorphine, after ascending single doses (0.5, 1, 2, 4 mg s.c.), was investigated in 10 patients with advanced Parkinson's disease presenting end-of-dose motor fluctuations. Aim of the study was to investigate the exact pharmacodynamic effects of different apomorphine doses on the magnitude and duration of motor responses in parkinsonian fluctuators. The average improvement in the magnitude of the motor response (% change of baseline score in the Columbia University Rating Scale) elicited by apomorphine was negligible with 0.5 mg, 10% after the 1 mg dose, 22% after 2 mg, and 25% after 4 mg. If a 20% improvement is considered clinically relevant, a response was seen in 0/10 patients (0.5 mg), 2/10 patients (1 mg), 6/10 patients (2 mg), and 6/8 patients (4 mg). The duration of response was about 0.25 h (1 mg), 0.58 h (2 mg), and 0.72 h (4 mg). An explorative analysis of individual plasma concentration vs. effect curve, yielded a steep, sigmoidal concentration effect relationship with fast equilibrium at the effect site. The EC 50 of the individual curves averaged 20 pMol/ml. However, several curves exhibited proteresis, making the application of a PK-PD model impossible. The reason for proteresis is not clear, it might indicate acute tolerance as well as a redistribution of apomorphine from the effect site.
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