Subthalamic and pallidal deep brain stimulation for Parkinson’s disease—meta-analysis of outcomes

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作者
M. Lenard Lachenmayer
Melina Mürset
Nicolas Antih
Ines Debove
Julia Muellner
Maëlys Bompart
Janine-Ai Schlaeppi
Andreas Nowacki
Hana You
Joan P. Michelis
Alain Dransart
Claudio Pollo
Guenther Deuschl
Paul Krack
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[1] Bern University Hospital,Department of Neurology, Inselspital
[2] University of Bern,Department of Neurosurgery, Inselspital
[3] Aleva Neurotherapeutics SA,Department of Neurology, UKSH
[4] Bern University Hospital,undefined
[5] University of Bern,undefined
[6] Christian-Albrechts-University,undefined
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Although deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the globus pallidus internus (GPi) and the subthalamic nucleus (STN) has become an established treatment for Parkinson’s disease (PD), a recent meta-analysis of outcomes is lacking. To address this gap, we performed a meta-analysis of bilateral STN- and GPi-DBS studies published from 1990-08/2019. Studies with ≥10 subjects reporting Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) III motor scores at baseline and 6–12 months follow-up were included. Several outcome variables were analyzed and adverse events (AE) were summarized. 39 STN studies (2035 subjects) and 5 GPi studies (292 subjects) were eligible. UPDRS-II score after surgery in the stimulation-ON/medication-OFF state compared to preoperative medication-OFF state improved by 47% with STN-DBS and 18.5% with GPi-DBS. UPDRS-III score improved by 50.5% with STN-DBS and 29.8% with GPi-DBS. STN-DBS improved dyskinesia by 64%, daily OFF time by 69.1%, and quality of life measured by PDQ-39 by 22.2%, while Levodopa Equivalent Daily Dose (LEDD) was reduced by 50.0%. For GPi-DBS information regarding dyskinesia, OFF time, PDQ-39 and LEDD was insufficient for further analysis. Correlation analysis showed that preoperative L-dopa responsiveness was highly predictive of the STN-DBS motor outcome across all studies. Most common surgery-related AE were infection (5.1%) and intracranial hemorrhage (3.1%). Despite a series of technological advances, outcomes of modern surgery are still comparable with those of the early days of DBS. Recent changes in target selection with a preference of GPi in elderly patients with cognitive deficits and more psychiatric comorbidities require more published data for validation.
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