cover image European Journal of Neurology

European Journal of Neurology

2023 - Volume 30
Issue Supplement S2 | November 2023

REVIEW ARTICLE

Abstract

An important aim in long‐term levodopa therapy is to prolong the duration of symptomatic efficacy of each dose without increasing peak plasma concentrations above the threshold for the emergence of dyskinesias. One strategy is to enhance levodopa delivery to the brain by co‐administering it with inhibitors of peripheral dopa‐decarboxylase and catechol‐O‐methyltransferase (COMT). Levodopa, carbidopa and entacapone (LCE), available in a range of fixed‐dose combinations as the branded formulation Stalevo (Orion Pharma), has been developed to address this requirement and has been in general use for 20 years, having first been evaluated in randomized controlled trials. Experience with LCE has established that improved levodopa pharmacokinetics achieved with dual‐enzyme inhibition are translated into improved clinical efficacy, including the possibility of reducing total levodopa dosage with no loss of therapeutic effect. The ease and tolerability of switching to LCE has been affirmed in the SIMCOM trial and by personal experience detailed in this review. Some 300,000 patient‐years of safety data are available for LCE, including trial data for up to 5 years. Most adverse effects associated with LCE are attributable to the levodopa component rather than the enzyme inhibitors. The hepatotoxicity observed with the class comparator tolcapone has not been observed with entacapone, the COMT inhibitor in LCE, and there is no formal requirement to monitor liver function during LCE therapy. Other common side effects include diarrhoea, which is one of the more prominent non‐dopaminergic adverse events, and urine discolouration, which is harmless but about which patients may require reassurance.

REVIEW ARTICLE

Abstract

Adjunct therapy with the catechol‐O‐methyltransferase inhibitor entacapone is a first‐line approach to treat wearing‐off type motor fluctuations in levodopa‐treated Parkinson's disease (PD) patients. Five randomized placebo‐controlled trials including a total of >1000 patients have established its efficacy, showing increases in ON time between 0.7 and 1.6 h, with corresponding OFF‐time reductions. These and other trials also found improvements in ON motor function and quality of life. Additional trials have tested the efficacy of adjunct entacapone in patients either without or with early and mild motor fluctuations and also found enhanced motor control and improved activities of daily living function and quality of life, whereas the STRIDE‐PD trial failed to show efficacy of early entacapone use in delaying the onset of dyskinesias. Adjunct entacapone enhances dopaminergic activity and may increase levodopa‐induced adverse events like dyskinesias, which can usually be controlled by modest levodopa dose reductions. There is no formal requirement to monitor liver function during entacapone treatment. Entacapone can be a rare cause of lymphocytic colitis with severe diarrhoea and need for treatment discontinuation. In 2003, a triple‐combination pill of levodopa, carbidopa, and entacapone (LCE) was first introduced onto the market, and since then proprietary LCE (Stalevo) is indicated on the basis of those trials for patients with idiopathic PD to (i) substitute for immediate‐release carbidopa/levodopa and entacapone previously administered as individual products or (ii) replace immediate‐release carbidopa/levodopa therapy (without entacapone) when patients taking a total daily dose of levodopa of ≤600 mg and not experiencing dyskinesias experience signs and symptoms of end‐of‐dose wearing off.

REVIEW ARTICLE

Abstract

Enzymatic metabolism is the key determinant of the overall bioavailability, brain penetration, and efficacy of levodopa in the treatment of Parkinsons disease (PD). Enzyme inhibitors in the form of peripheral dopa‐decarboxylase inhibitors and monoamine oxidase type‐B inhibitors have been successfully employed to maximize the utility of levodopa in both early‐ and late‐stage PD. However, another major pathway of the peripheral metabolism of levodopa through catechol‐O‐methyltransferase (COMT) remains unchecked by those measures. Consequently, this becomes a major factor in determining the extent of delivery to the brain. The introduction of tolcapone as a potent and effective peripheral and central COMT inhibitor was frustrated by the emergence of hepatic toxicity. Only with the subsequent introduction of entacapone as an effective inhibitor of peripheral COMT activity has it become possible to fully control the peripheral metabolism of levodopa and to optimize its delivery to the brain. At a single‐dose level of 200 mg, the efficacy of entacapone in reducing OFF time and increasing ON time has led to its widespread use for the treatment of "wearing off". To maximize the efficacy of entacapone and to time‐lock its pharmacokinetic profile to that of levodopa, a triple combination of levodopa, carbidopa, and entacapone in the form of Stalevo that allowed for flexibility in levodopa dosing was introduced early in the 21st century. This pioneering development has been successfully used worldwide for the past 20 years. This review considers the role of all three classes of enzyme inhibitors in PD medicine.

EDITORIAL

The 20th anniversary of the first clinical use of Stalevo

ISSUE INFORMATION

Issue Information