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A Randomized Clinical Trial of High-Dosage Coenzyme Q10 in Early Parkinson Disease

Authors
M. Beal,David Oakes
Ira Shoulson,Claire Henchcliffe,Wendy Galpern,Richard Haas,Jorge Juncos,John Nutt,Tiffini Voss,Bernard Ravina,Clifford Shults,Karen Helles,Victoria Snively,Mark Lew,Brian Griebner,Arthur Watts,Shan Gao,Emmanuelle Pourcher,Louisette Bond,Katie Kompoliti,Pinky Agarwal,Cherissa Sia,Mandar Jog,Linda Cole,Munira Sultana,Roger Kurlan,Irene Richard,Cheryl Deeley,Cheryl Waters,Angel Figueroa,Ani Arkun,Matthew Brodsky,William Ondo,Christine Hunter,Joohi Jimenez‐Shahed,Alicia Palao,Janis Miyasaki,Julie So,James Tetrud,Liza Reys,Katharine Smith,Carlos Singer,Anita Blenke,David Russell,Candace Cotto,Joseph Friedman,Margaret Lannon,Lin Zhang,Edward Drasby,Rajeev Kumar,Thyagarajan Subramanian,Donna Ford,David Grimes,Diane Côté,Jennifer Conway,Andrew Siderowf,Marian Evatt,Barbara Sommerfeld,Abraham Lieberman,Michael Okun,Ramon Rodriguez,Stacy Merritt,Camille Swartz,W. Martin,Pamela King,Natividad Stover,Stephanie Guthrie,Ray Watts,Anwar Ahmed,Hubert Fernandez,Adrienna Winters,Zoltán Mari,Ted Dawson,Becky Dunlop,Andrew Feigin,Barbara Shannon,Melissa Nirenberg,Mattson Ogg,Samuel Ellias,Cathi-Ann Thomas,Karen Frei,Iván Bódis-Wollner,Sofya Glazman,Thomas Mayer,Robert Hauser,Rajesh Pahwa,April Langhammer,Ranjit Ranawaya,Lorelei Derwent,Kapil Sethi,Buff Farrow,Rajan Prakash,Irene Litvan,Annette Robinson,Alok Sahay,Maureen Gartner,Vanessa Hinson,Samuel Markind,Melisa Pelikan,Joel Perlmutter,Johanna Hartlein,Eric Molho,Sharon Evans,Charles Adler,Amy Duffy,Marlene Lind,Lawrence Elmer,Kathy Davis,Julia Spears,Stephanie Wilson,Maureen Leehey,Neal Hermanowicz,Shari Niswonger,Holly Shill,Sanja Obradov,Alex Rajput,Marilyn Cowper,Stephanie Lessig,David Song,Deborah Fontaine,Cindy Zadikoff,Karen Williams,Karen Blindauer,Jo Bergholte,Clara Propsom,Mark Stacy,Joanne Field,Dragos Mihaila,Mark Chilton,Manuchair Ebadi,Jeri Sieren,David Simon,Lauren Kraics,Althea Silver,James Boyd,Robert Hamill,Christopher Ingvoldstad,Jennifer Young,Karen Thomas,Sandra Kostyk,Joanne Wojcieszek,Ronald Pfeiffer,Michel Panisset,Monica Beland,Stephen Reich,Michelle Cines,Nancy Zappala,J. Rivest,Richard Zweig,L. Lumina,Colette Hilliard,Stephen Grill,Marye Kellermann,Paul Tuite,Susan Rolandelli,Un Kang,Joan Young,Jayaraman Rao,Maureen Cook,Lawrence Severt,Karyn Boyar,Joohi Jimenez-Shahed,Ramón Rodríguez
+161 authors
,Wayne Matson
Published
Mar 25, 2014
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Abstract

Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10), an antioxidant that supports mitochondrial function, has been shown in preclinical Parkinson disease (PD) models to reduce the loss of dopamine neurons, and was safe and well tolerated in early-phase human studies. A previous phase II study suggested possible clinical benefit.To examine whether CoQ10 could slow disease progression in early PD.A phase III randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trial at 67 North American sites consisting of participants 30 years of age or older who received a diagnosis of PD within 5 years and who had the following inclusion criteria: the presence of a rest tremor, bradykinesia, and rigidity; a modified Hoehn and Yahr stage of 2.5 or less; and no anticipated need for dopaminergic therapy within 3 months. Exclusion criteria included the use of any PD medication within 60 days, the use of any symptomatic PD medication for more than 90 days, atypical or drug-induced parkinsonism, a Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) rest tremor score of 3 or greater for any limb, a Mini-Mental State Examination score of 25 or less, a history of stroke, the use of certain supplements, and substantial recent exposure to CoQ10. Of 696 participants screened, 78 were found to be ineligible, and 18 declined participation.The remaining 600 participants were randomly assigned to receive placebo, 1200 mg/d of CoQ10, or 2400 mg/d of CoQ10; all participants received 1200 IU/d of vitamin E.Participants were observed for 16 months or until a disability requiring dopaminergic treatment. The prospectively defined primary outcome measure was the change in total UPDRS score (Parts I-III) from baseline to final visit. The study was powered to detect a 3-point difference between an active treatment and placebo.The baseline characteristics of the participants were well balanced, the mean age was 62.5 years, 66% of participants were male, and the mean baseline total UPDRS score was 22.7. A total of 267 participants required treatment (94 received placebo, 87 received 1200 mg/d of CoQ10, and 86 received 2400 mg/d of CoQ10), and 65 participants (29 who received placebo, 19 who received 1200 mg/d of CoQ10, and 17 who received 2400 mg/d of CoQ10) withdrew prematurely. Treatments were well tolerated with no safety concerns. The study was terminated after a prespecified futility criterion was reached. At study termination, both active treatment groups showed slight adverse trends relative to placebo. Adjusted mean changes (worsening) in total UPDRS scores from baseline to final visit were 6.9 points (placebo), 7.5 points (1200 mg/d of CoQ10; P = .49 relative to placebo), and 8.0 points (2400 mg/d of CoQ10; P = .21 relative to placebo).Coenzyme Q10 was safe and well tolerated in this population, but showed no evidence of clinical benefit.clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00740714.

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