Caffeine as symptomatic treatment for Parkinson disease (Café-PD): A randomized trial

Ronald B Postuma, Julius Anang, Amelie Pelletier, Lawrence Joseph, Mariana Moscovich, David Grimes, Sarah Furtado, Renato P Munhoz, Silke Appel-Cresswell, Adriana Moro, Andrew Borys, Douglas Hobson, Anthony E Lang, Ronald B Postuma, Julius Anang, Amelie Pelletier, Lawrence Joseph, Mariana Moscovich, David Grimes, Sarah Furtado, Renato P Munhoz, Silke Appel-Cresswell, Adriana Moro, Andrew Borys, Douglas Hobson, Anthony E Lang

Abstract

Objective: To assess effects of caffeine on Parkinson disease (PD).

Methods: In this multicenter parallel-group controlled trial, patients with PD with 1-8 years disease duration, Hoehn & Yahr stages I-III, on stable symptomatic therapy were randomized to caffeine 200 mg BID vs matching placebo capsules for 6-18 months. The primary research question was whether objective motor scores would differ at 6 months (Movement Disorder Society-sponsored Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale [MDS-UPDRS]-III, Class I evidence). Secondary outcomes included safety and tolerability, motor symptoms (MDS-UPDRS-II), motor fluctuations, sleep, nonmotor symptoms (MDS-UPDRS-I), cognition (Montreal Cognitive Assessment), and quality of life.

Results: Sixty patients received caffeine and 61 placebo. Caffeine was well-tolerated with similar prevalence of side effects as placebo. There was no improvement in motor parkinsonism (the primary outcome) with caffeine treatment compared to placebo (difference between groups -0.48 [95% confidence interval -3.21 to 2.25] points on MDS-UPDRS-III). Similarly, on secondary outcomes, there was no change in motor signs or motor symptoms (MDS-UPDRS-II) at any time point, and no difference on quality of life. There was a slight improvement in somnolence over the first 6 months, which attenuated over time. There was a slight increase in dyskinesia with caffeine (MDS-UPDRS-4.1+4.2 = 0.25 points higher), and caffeine was associated with worse cognitive testing scores (average Montreal Cognitive Assessment = 0.66 [0.01, 1.32] worse than placebo).

Conclusion: Caffeine did not provide clinically important improvement of motor manifestations of PD (Class I evidence). Epidemiologic links between caffeine and lower PD risk do not appear to be explained by symptomatic effects.

Clinicaltrialsgov identifier: NCT01738178.

Classification of evidence: This study provides Class I evidence that for patients with PD, caffeine does not significantly improve motor manifestations.

© 2017 American Academy of Neurology.

Figures

Figure 1. Patient flow throughout the course…
Figure 1. Patient flow throughout the course of the study
BDI = Beck Depression Inventory.
Figure 2. Change from baseline in selected…
Figure 2. Change from baseline in selected Parkinson disease measures in caffeine vs placebo
(A) Change in Movement Disorder Society–sponsored Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) III, (B) change in MDS-UPDRS 1.8 (daytime sleepiness), (C) change in MDS-UPDRS II, (D) change in Scales for Outcomes in PD (SCOPA) (daytime), (E) change in MDS-UPDRS IV (dyskinesia), (F) change in Montreal Cognitive Assessment. Note that the primary outcome is at 6 months; only a proportion of patients continued follow-up into 12 months (73%) and 18 months (55%). Error bars indicate standard error. The asterisk indicates a statistically significant difference between caffeine and placebo (p < 0.05).

Source: PubMed

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