TY - JOUR
T1 - Results of a Randomized Clinical Trial of Speech After Early Neurostimulation in Parkinson's Disease
AU - for the EARLYSTIM Study Group
AU - Pinto, Serge
AU - Nebel, Adelheid
AU - Rau, Jörn
AU - Espesser, Robert
AU - Maillochon, Pauline
AU - Niebuhr, Oliver
AU - Krack, Paul
AU - Witjas, Tatiana
AU - Ghio, Alain
AU - Cuartero, Marie Charlotte
AU - Timmermann, Lars
AU - Schnitzler, Alfons
AU - Hesekamp, Helke
AU - Meier, Niklaus
AU - Müllner, Julia
AU - Hälbig, Thomas D.
AU - Möller, Bettina
AU - Paschen, Steffen
AU - Paschen, Laura
AU - Volkmann, Jens
AU - Barbe, Michael T.
AU - Fink, Gereon R.
AU - Becker, Johannes
AU - Reker, Paul
AU - Kühn, Andrea A.
AU - Schneider, Gerd Helge
AU - Fraix, Valérie
AU - Seigneuret, Eric
AU - Kistner, Andrea
AU - Rascol, Olivier
AU - Brefel-Courbon, Christine
AU - Ory-Magne, Fabienne
AU - Hartmann, Christian J.
AU - Wojtecki, Lars
AU - Fradet, Anne
AU - Maltête, David
AU - Damier, Philippe
AU - Le Dily, Séverine
AU - Sixel-Döring, Friederike
AU - Benecke, Petra
AU - Weiss, Daniel
AU - Wächter, Tobias
AU - Pinsker, Marcus O.
AU - Régis, Jean
AU - Thobois, Stéphane
AU - Polo, Gustavo
AU - Houeto, Jean Luc
AU - Hartmann, Andreas
AU - Knudsen, Karina
AU - Vidailhet, Marie
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
PY - 2023/2
Y1 - 2023/2
N2 - Background: The EARLYSTIM trial demonstrated for Parkinson's disease patients with early motor complications that deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus (STN-DBS) and best medical treatment (BMT) was superior to BMT alone. Objective: This prospective, ancillary study on EARLYSTIM compared changes in blinded speech intelligibility assessment between STN-DBS and BMT over 2 years, and secondary outcomes included non-speech oral movements (maximum phonation time [MPT], oral diadochokinesis), physician- and patient-reported assessments. Methods: STN-DBS (n = 102) and BMT (n = 99) groups underwent assessments on/off medication at baseline and 24 months (in four conditions: on/off medication, ON/OFF stimulation—for STN-DBS). Words and sentences were randomly presented to blinded listeners, and speech intelligibility rate was measured. Statistical analyses compared changes between the STN-DBS and BMT groups from baseline to 24 months. Results: Over the 2-year period, changes in speech intelligibility and MPT, as well as patient-reported outcomes, were not different between groups, either off or on medication or OFF or ON stimulation, but most outcomes showed a nonsignificant trend toward worsening in both groups. Change in oral diadochokinesis was significantly different between STN-DBS and BMT groups, on medication and OFF STN-DBS, with patients in the STN-DBS group performing slightly worse than patients under BMT only. A signal for clinical worsening with STN-DBS was found for the individual speech item of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale, Part III. Conclusion: At this early stage of the patients' disease, STN-DBS did not result in a consistent deterioration in blinded speech intelligibility assessment and patient-reported communication, as observed in studies of advanced Parkinson's Disease.
AB - Background: The EARLYSTIM trial demonstrated for Parkinson's disease patients with early motor complications that deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus (STN-DBS) and best medical treatment (BMT) was superior to BMT alone. Objective: This prospective, ancillary study on EARLYSTIM compared changes in blinded speech intelligibility assessment between STN-DBS and BMT over 2 years, and secondary outcomes included non-speech oral movements (maximum phonation time [MPT], oral diadochokinesis), physician- and patient-reported assessments. Methods: STN-DBS (n = 102) and BMT (n = 99) groups underwent assessments on/off medication at baseline and 24 months (in four conditions: on/off medication, ON/OFF stimulation—for STN-DBS). Words and sentences were randomly presented to blinded listeners, and speech intelligibility rate was measured. Statistical analyses compared changes between the STN-DBS and BMT groups from baseline to 24 months. Results: Over the 2-year period, changes in speech intelligibility and MPT, as well as patient-reported outcomes, were not different between groups, either off or on medication or OFF or ON stimulation, but most outcomes showed a nonsignificant trend toward worsening in both groups. Change in oral diadochokinesis was significantly different between STN-DBS and BMT groups, on medication and OFF STN-DBS, with patients in the STN-DBS group performing slightly worse than patients under BMT only. A signal for clinical worsening with STN-DBS was found for the individual speech item of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale, Part III. Conclusion: At this early stage of the patients' disease, STN-DBS did not result in a consistent deterioration in blinded speech intelligibility assessment and patient-reported communication, as observed in studies of advanced Parkinson's Disease.
KW - Parkinson's disease
KW - deep brain stimulation
KW - dysarthria
KW - speech
KW - subthalamic nucleus
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85143632859&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/mds.29282
DO - 10.1002/mds.29282
M3 - Article
C2 - 36461899
AN - SCOPUS:85143632859
SN - 0885-3185
VL - 38
SP - 212
EP - 222
JO - Movement Disorders
JF - Movement Disorders
IS - 2
ER -