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Chinese Herbal Medicine Treatment as Adjunct Therapy for Parkinson's Disease

Phase 2
Completed
Conditions
Parkinson Disease
Interventions
Drug: Conventional medication
Drug: Chinese herbal medicine treatment
Registration Number
NCT05001217
Lead Sponsor
Hong Kong Baptist University
Brief Summary

Background: Parkinson's disease (PD) is a prevalent and debilitating condition. Conventional medications cannot control all symptoms and may inflict adverse effects. A survey reported that Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) is frequently sought. Existing CHM trials were contradictory and often of poor quality due to a lack of methodological rigor. A national clinical guideline was drafted in China with diagnostic criteria and treatment strategy of Chinese medicine (CM) patterns subgroups of PD. The suggested CHM was found to exhibit a neuroprotective effect in in vitro and in vivo studies. This trial aims to preliminarily assess the effect of CHM prescribed based on pattern differentiation on PD symptoms and patients' quality of life, and evaluate the feasibility of the trial design for a future large-scale trial.

Methods: This trial will be a pilot assessor- and data analyst blind, add-on, randomised, controlled, pragmatic clinical trial. 160 PD patients will be recruited and randomised into treatment or control groups in a 1:1 ratio. The trial will be conducted over 32 weeks. PD patients in the treatment group will be stratified into subgroups based on CM pattern and receive CHM accordingly in addition to conventional medication (ConM). The control group will receive ConM only. The primary outcome will be part II of the Movement Disorder Society Sponsored Revision of Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS). Secondary outcomes will include part and total scores of MDS-UPDRS, domain and total scores of Non-motor symptom scale (NMSS). Adverse events will be monitored by monthly follow-ups and questionnaires. Mixed models will be used to analyse data by Jamovi and R.

Expected outcomes: The success of our trial will show that the pragmatic design with subgroup differentiation is feasible and can produce reliable results. It will also provide preliminary data of the effect of CHM on improving clinical outcomes and quality of PD patients. Data collected will be used to optimize the study design of the future large-scale clinical study.

Ethical clearance: Ethical clearance of this study was given by the Research Ethics Committee of Hong Kong Baptist University (REC/20-21/0206).

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
160
Inclusion Criteria
  1. diagnosed with PD according to United Kingdom Parkinson's Disease Society Brain Bank (UKPDBB) diagnostic criteria
  2. aged 18 to 80 years old
  3. under stable ConM treatment with no alteration of dosage in the past 30 days
Exclusion Criteria
  1. secondary PD or atypical parkinsonian disorder
  2. used antidepressants in the previous month
  3. with concurrent psychiatric, mood, or other neurological disorders
  4. suicidal (with suicidal thoughts in the past year)
  5. with concurrent severe disorders, such as cancer and myocardial infarction
  6. participation in another Chinese herbal medicine clinical study
  7. pregnant or breast-feeding
  8. Hoehn and Yahr (H&Y) stage 4 or above
  9. liver and renal function derangement

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Chinese herbal medicine treatment plus conventional medicationConventional medicationParticipants will receive integrated medicine treatment combining Chinese herbal treatment, given in the form of granules, and conventional medication for 32 weeks. Patients will be differentiated into 4 subgroups based on their Chinese medicine pattern, and receive herbal treatment accordingly. An existing clinical pathway will guide the diagnosis and treatment of the Chinese medicine patterns. The four pattern subgroups are as follows: 1) the "Phlegm-heat stirring Wind" subgroup; 2) the "Spleen-and Kidney-Yang" subgroup; 3) the "Internal Stirring of Yang and Wind" subgroup; and 4) the "Qi deficiency and stasis of Blood" subgroup To resemble actual clinical practice, minor adjustment of herbal treatment will be possible and also adhere to the mentioned clinical guideline. The dosage of each herbal drug will follow the instructions of China Pharmacopeia.
Chinese herbal medicine treatment plus conventional medicationChinese herbal medicine treatmentParticipants will receive integrated medicine treatment combining Chinese herbal treatment, given in the form of granules, and conventional medication for 32 weeks. Patients will be differentiated into 4 subgroups based on their Chinese medicine pattern, and receive herbal treatment accordingly. An existing clinical pathway will guide the diagnosis and treatment of the Chinese medicine patterns. The four pattern subgroups are as follows: 1) the "Phlegm-heat stirring Wind" subgroup; 2) the "Spleen-and Kidney-Yang" subgroup; 3) the "Internal Stirring of Yang and Wind" subgroup; and 4) the "Qi deficiency and stasis of Blood" subgroup To resemble actual clinical practice, minor adjustment of herbal treatment will be possible and also adhere to the mentioned clinical guideline. The dosage of each herbal drug will follow the instructions of China Pharmacopeia.
Conventional medicationConventional medicationConventional medication for Parkinson's disease include levodopa, dopamine agonist, Monoamine oxidase-B inhibitors, Catechol-O-methyltransferase inhibitors, etc.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
the Movement Disorder Society Sponsored Revision of Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) Part IIfrom baseline to week 32

Assesses the self-reported motor experience of the daily living of Parkinson's patients Scale (Higher the score, the more severe the condition or symptom): 0: Normal, 1: Slight, 2: Mild, 3: Moderate, 4: Severe

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Part I, III and IV as well as the total score of MDS-UPDRSfrom baseline to week 32

Comprehensively assesses motor, non motor, and motor complications of Parkinson's patients Scale (Higher the score, the more severe the condition or symptom): Scale: 0: Normal, 1: Slight, 2: Mild, 3: Moderate, 4: Severe

Non-motor symptom scalefrom baseline to week 32

Assesses in details the severity of non motor symptoms of Parkinson's Scale (Higher the score, the more severe the condition or symptom): Severity: 0 = None, 1= Mild (symptoms present but causes little distress or disturbance to patient), 2 = Moderate (some distress or disturbance to patient), 3 = Severe (major source of distress or disturbance to patient); Frequency: 1 = Rarely (\<1/wk), 2 = Often (1/wk), 3 = Frequent (several times per week), 4 = Very Frequent (daily or all the time)

Trial Locations

Locations (2)

Department of Medicine, Queen Elizabeth Hospital

🇭🇰

Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Hong Kong Parkinson's Disease Association

🇭🇰

Hong Kong, Hong Kong

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