Transtelephonic Home Blood Pressure to Assess the Monoamine Oxidase-B Inhibitor Rasagiline in Parkinson Disease.
Author(s): White WB, Salzman P, Schwid SR, for the Parkinson's Rasagiline: Efficacy Safety in the Treatment of "Off" Parkinson Study Group
Affiliation(s): Division of Hypertension and Clinical Pharmacology, Pat and Jim Calhoun Cardiology Center and Clinical Trials Unit, University of Connecticut, Farmington, Conn; Medical Affairs, Teva Neuroscience, Inc, Horsham, Pa; and the Department of Neurology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY.
Publication date & source: 2008-08-04, Hypertension., [Epub ahead of print]
Publication type:
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors are associated with dietary tyramine interactions that can induce hypertensive crises. Rasagiline mesylate is a novel irreversible selective monoamine oxidase type B inhibitor for Parkinson disease that may have a low risk of interaction with dietary tyramine because of its selectivity. To study interactions of rasagiline with diets unrestricted in tyramine-containing foods, we incorporated transtelephonic, self-monitoring of the blood pressure (BP) into a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of rasagiline 0.5 and 1.0 mg daily in 414 levodopa-treated Parkinson patients with motor fluctuations. The proportion of patients with a systolic BP increase of >30 mm Hg was the primary BP end point. In 13 968 self-measured readings at baseline, the proportion of systolic BP values that increased by >30 mm Hg after a meal ranged from 9.5% to 12.9% in the 3 treatment groups. In 25 733 BPs obtained postrandomization, the proportion of values with a >30-mm Hg systolic postprandial increase was 15% in the placebo group, 15% in the rasagiline 0.5-mg group, and 11% in the rasagiline 1-mg group after 3 weeks of double-blind therapy and 13%, 14%, and 12%, respectively, after 26 weeks of treatment (P value was not significant for all of the comparisons among treatment groups). A postprandial increase in systolic BP to >180 mm Hg at any time after randomization was seen in 3.3%, 2.6%, and 2.9% of the placebo, 0.5-mg, and 1.0-mg rasagiline groups, respectively. These data demonstrate that rasagiline did not induce postprandial hypertension in patients with Parkinson disease who were on an unrestricted diet.
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