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J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr. · Apr 2017
Multicenter Study Observational StudyICARUS study: prevalence and clinical features of impulse control disorders in Parkinson's disease.
- Angelo Antonini, Paolo Barone, Ubaldo Bonuccelli, Karin Annoni, Mahnaz Asgharnejad, and Paolo Stanzione.
- Parkinson and Movement Disorders Unit, IRCCS Hospital San Camillo, Venice, and Department of Neurosciences (DNS), Padova University, Padova, Italy angelo3000@yahoo.com.
- J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr. 2017 Apr 1; 88 (4): 317324317-324.
BackgroundImpulse control disorders/other compulsive behaviours ('ICD behaviours') occur in Parkinson's disease (PD), but prospective studies are scarce, and prevalence and clinical characteristics of patients are insufficiently defined.ObjectivesTo assess the presence of ICD behaviours over a 2-year period, and evaluate patients' clinical characteristics.MethodsA prospective, non-interventional, multicentre study (ICARUS (Impulse Control disorders And the association of neuRopsychiatric symptoms, cognition and qUality of life in ParkinSon disease); SP0990) in treated Italian PD outpatients. Study visits: baseline, year 1, year 2. Surrogate primary variable: presence of ICD behaviours and five ICD subtypes assessed by modified Minnesota Impulsive Disorder Interview (mMIDI).Results1069/1095 (97.6%) patients comprised the Full Analysis Set. Point prevalence of ICD behaviours (mMIDI; primary analysis) was stable across visits: 28.6% (306/1069) at baseline, 29.3% (292/995) at year 1, 26.5% (245/925) at year 2. The most prevalent subtype was compulsive eating, followed by punding, compulsive sexual behaviour, gambling and buying disorder. Patients who were ICD positive at baseline were more likely to be male, younger, younger at PD onset, have longer disease duration, more severe non-motor symptoms (including mood and sexual function), depressive symptoms, sleep impairment and poorer PD-related quality of life. However, they did not differ from the ICD-negative patients in their severity of PD functional disability, motor performance and cognitive function.ConclusionsPrevalence of ICD behaviours was relatively stable across the 2-year observational period. ICD-positive patients had more severe depression, poorer sleep quality and reduced quality of life.© Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.
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