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Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of levodopa/carbidopa cotherapies for Parkinson’s disease

Thomas Müller

2020Expert Opinion on Drug Metabolism & Toxicology67 citationsDOI

Abstract

Introduction: Parkinson’s disease is a chronic, neurodegenerative disease entity with heterogeneous features and course. Levodopa is the most efficacious dopamine substituting drug. Particularly, long-term application of oral levodopa/decarboxylase inhibitor formulations sooner or later supports onset of fluctuations of movement. It also shifts levodopa turnover to O-methylation, which impairs human methylation capacity and increases oxidative stress.Areas covered: This narrative review summarizes pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic features of available levodopa cotherapies on the basis of a literature search with the terms L-dopa, inhibitors of catechol-O-methyltransferase and monoamine oxidase-B.Expert opinion: Long-term levodopa/dopa decarboxylase inhibitor application with concomitant inhibition of both, catechol-O-methyltransferase and monoamine oxidase-B supports a more continuous dopamine substitution, which ameliorates fluctuations of motor behavior. This triple combination also enhances both, antioxidative defense and methylation capacity. Inhibition of monoamine oxidase-B reduces generation of oxidative stress in the brain. Constraint of catechol-O-methyltransferase reduces homocysteine synthesis due to diminished consumption of methyl groups for levodopa turnover at least in the periphery. An additional nutritional supplementation with methyl group donating and free radical scavenging vitamins is recommendable, when future drugs are developed for long-term levodopa/dopa decarboxylase treated patients. Personalized medicine treatment concepts shall also consider nutritional aspects of Parkinson’s disease.

Topics & Concepts

LevodopaCatechol-O-methyl transferaseParkinson's diseaseAromatic L-amino acid decarboxylasePharmacologyDopamineDecarboxylase inhibitorMonoamine oxidasePharmacodynamicsCarbidopaMedicineChemistryPharmacokineticsInternal medicineDiseaseBiochemistryEnzymeGeneAlleleParkinson's Disease Mechanisms and TreatmentsNuclear Receptors and SignalingNeurological disorders and treatments
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