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Network modulation following sham surgery in Parkinson’s disease
Ji Hyun Ko, … , Michael G. Kaplitt, David Eidelberg
Ji Hyun Ko, … , Michael G. Kaplitt, David Eidelberg
Published July 18, 2014
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2014;124(8):3656-3666. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI75073.
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Research Article

Network modulation following sham surgery in Parkinson’s disease

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Abstract

Patient responses to placebo and sham effects are a major obstacle to the development of therapies for brain disorders, including Parkinson’s disease (PD). Here, we used functional brain imaging and network analysis to study the circuitry underlying placebo effects in PD subjects randomized to sham surgery as part of a double-blind gene therapy trial. Metabolic imaging was performed prior to randomization, then again at 6 and 12 months after sham surgery. In this cohort, the sham response was associated with the expression of a distinct cerebello-limbic circuit. The expression of this network increased consistently in patients blinded to treatment and correlated with independent clinical ratings. Once patients were unblinded, network expression declined toward baseline levels. Analogous network alterations were not seen with open-label levodopa treatment or during disease progression. Furthermore, sham outcomes in blinded patients correlated with baseline network expression, suggesting the potential use of this quantitative measure to identify “sham-susceptible” subjects before randomization. Indeed, Monte Carlo simulations revealed that a priori exclusion of such individuals substantially lowers the number of randomized participants needed to demonstrate treatment efficacy. Individualized subject selection based on a predetermined network criterion may therefore limit the need for sham interventions in future clinical trials.

Authors

Ji Hyun Ko, Andrew Feigin, Paul J. Mattis, Chris C. Tang, Yilong Ma, Vijay Dhawan, Matthew J. During, Michael G. Kaplitt, David Eidelberg

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Figure 2

Network changes: relationship to the sham response.

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Network changes: relationship to the sham response.
(A) A significant di...
(A) A significant difference in UPDRS motor outcomes (dark gray bars) was evident across the 3 testing groups [(F(2,21) = 20.095, P < 0.001, ANOVA]. As expected, motor improvement was similar for the sham responders in the testing set and for the subjects who received open-label levodopa treatment (P = 0.730, post-hoc LSD); these changes differed from those seen in the sham nonresponders (P < 0.001). Significant differences were also seen for network activity measurements (light gray bars) in the 3 groups [F(2,21) = 4.156, P = 0.030]. In contrast to the motor changes, SSRP modulation was greater in the sham responders than in either the sham nonresponders (P = 0.014) or the individuals receiving open-label levodopa treatment (P = 0.036). (B) A significant correlation was observed between changes in SSRP expression in the SHAM cohort (n = 23) and concurrent motor outcomes under the blind at 6 months (r = –0.749, P < 0.001, Pearson’s correlation).

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