The Levodopa Response Varies in Pathologically Confirmed Parkinson's Disease: A Systematic Review

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Abstract

Background: A good response to levodopa is a key feature of Parkinson's disease (PD), and a poor response suggests an alternative diagnosis, but the extent of variation in the levodopa response in definite PD is not well defined. Literature Review: A systematic review of articles reporting pathologically confirmed PD and levodopa responsiveness from 1971 to 2018 was performed using the medical subheadings “postmortem,” “Parkinson's disease,” "levodopa," and “l-dopa” in PubMed, Embase, and Latin American and Caribbean Health Sciences Literature (LILACS) databases. Cases: A total of 12 articles described 445 PD cases: 61.7% male, age at disease onset 64.0 years (SD 9.6), age at death 77.1 years (SD 7.2). Levodopa responsiveness was reported in 399 cases (89.7%) either as a graded or a binary response. In the 280 cases (70.2%) describing a graded response, it was excellent in 37.5%, good in 45.7%, moderate in 12.1%, and poor in 4.6%. In the 119 cases describing a binary response (29.8%), 73.1% were levodopa responsive, and 26.9% were nonresponsive. Comorbid brain pathology was present in 137 of 235 cases assessed, being cerebrovascular in 46.0% and Alzheimer's disease in 37.2% of these, but its contribution to levodopa responsiveness was unclear. Conclusions: The levodopa motor response varies in definite PD. Explanations other than diagnostic inaccuracy should be explored.

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Pitz, V., Malek, N., Tobias, E. S., Grosset, K. A., Gentleman, S., & Grosset, D. G. (2020, February 1). The Levodopa Response Varies in Pathologically Confirmed Parkinson’s Disease: A Systematic Review. Movement Disorders Clinical Practice. Wiley-Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/mdc3.12885

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