## Abstract There has been recent interest in the possibility that impaired neurogenesis may contribute to the decline in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease (PD). We have investigated the effects of commonly used treatments for PD on neural stem cell (NSC
Costs of drug treatment in Parkinson's disease
β Scribed by Dr. Richard C. Dodel; Karla M. Eggert; Marika S. Singer; Tobias E. Eichhorn; Oliver Pogarell; Wolfgang H. Oertel
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 660 KB
- Volume
- 13
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-3185
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) has a major socioeconomic impact on society. The chronic, progressive course of the disease, which often leads to severe disability, results in high expenses for the medical resources used for treatment, care, and rehabilitation of patients as well as reduced or lost productivity as a result of illness or premature death. In Great Britain, it has been estimated that the National Health Service spends up to $383 million (1992) annually for the care of PD. This emphasizes the importance of assessing the costs related to this disease. A detailed knowledge of the cost allocation would provide a solid basis on which health care priorities can be rationally set. Next to hospitalization, drug treatment accounts for the highest expense for direct medical costs of PD. Therefore, this analysis focuses on the costs of drug treatment for PD. The cost analysis was based on a retrospective study of 409 patients with PD who were seen over a 1βyear period in our movement disorders clinic. The cost of therapy varied considerably depending on the severity of the condition (assessed in the βoffβ phase), the incidence of motor fluctuations, and the type of PD. In the early stage of the disease (Hoehn and Yahr stage I [HY I]), mean daily costs for therapy were DM (German marks) 6.60, which increased in later stages of the disease (HYV) to DM 22.00. If rare cases requiring continuous subcutaneous apomorphine infusion were included, mean daily costs of patients in HY V rose to DM 32.50 (the mean daily costs of subcutaneous apomorphineβtreated patients in HY V: DM 74.30). Patients with motor fluctuations accounted for higher costs (DM 16.50) compared with those without motor fluctuations (DM 7.80). With respect to the three subtypes of PD, the mean daily expenditure was DM 7.00 for the tremorβdominant type, DM 12.40 for the akineticβrigid type, and DM 10.80 for the mixed type. In the group of 409 PD patients included in this analysis, the average daily expenditure for drug treatment totaled DM 10.70 per patient (including patients on subcutaneous apomorphine).
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A marked response to oral dopaminergic substitution is one of the diagnostic criteria for idiopathic Parkinson's disease. Oral L-Dopa treatment remains to be the most efficacious and best tolerated way of parkinsonian drug therapy. A majority of patients, however, will develop late complications inc
## Abstract :Physicians modify drug schedules in response to their patients' clinical responses. Failure to relieve patients' symptoms or the emergence of drugβrelated side effects may reflect nonadherence to a prescribed drug schedule rather than incorrect therapeutic physician decisions. Using a