Weight loss may mark rapid Parkinson's disease progression
Published
on January 19, 2016 at 5:15 PM
By Eleanor McDermid,
Senior medwireNews Reporter
Weight loss in
patients with early Parkinson’s disease is associated with worsening motor
function, research shows.
Anne-Marie Wills
(Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA) and
colleagues identified a subgroup of patients, comprising 9.4% of the studied
cohort, in whom body mass index (BMI) decreased while scores on the United
Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) worsened.
“Although this does
not imply causation, our results suggest that weight and BMI are important
clinical biomarkers and that data on weight and BMI should be collected even in
early PD”, the team writes in JAMA Neurology.
The patients were
participants in a large clinical trial and had been recruited within 5 years of
their PD diagnosis. Most (76.6%) of the 1673 patients had a stable BMI across
seven visits during 72 months of follow-up, and these patients experienced an increase
(worsening) in total and motor UPDRS scores, of about 22 and 12 points,
respectively.
Patients whose BMI
decreased had a markedly faster deterioration in total and motor UPDRS scores,
by an average of 2.40 and 1.48 points per visit, respectively, compared with
those whose BMI remained stable. Conversely, the 13.9% of patients whose BMI
increased had significantly slower progression than those with stable BMI, with
total and motor UPDRS scores increasing by an average of 0.89 and 0.51 points
less per visit.
BMI at the time of
study enrolment did not influence progression. Indeed, the group with a
decreasing BMI contained more patients who were obese at baseline than the
other groups did. Patients with decreasing BMI were also more likely than
patients in the other groups to be taking levodopa only, and at a higher dose.
However, the association between BMI changes and disease progression remained
after accounting for these variables.
Just 76 patients died
during follow-up, so the team did not find a statistically significant
association between BMI changes and mortality after accounting for confounders,
but it did appear to follow a similar pattern.
The researchers
believe they have identified a subtype of PD, characterised by decreasing BMI
and fast progression.
“This subtype might
represent a more severe, hypermetabolic form of PD, or it might be a subtype of
PD in which the patient has greater gastrointestinal autonomic symptoms,
reduced appetite, and reduced oral intake”, they suggest.
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