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Clinical Trial
. 2014 May;71(5):543-52.
doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2014.131.

A randomized clinical trial of high-dosage coenzyme Q10 in early Parkinson disease: no evidence of benefit

Parkinson Study Group QE3 InvestigatorsM Flint Beal  1 David Oakes  2 Ira Shoulson  3 Claire Henchcliffe  1 Wendy R Galpern  4 Richard Haas  5 Jorge L Juncos  6 John G Nutt  7 Tiffini Smith Voss  8 Bernard Ravina  9 Clifford M Shults  10 Karen Helles  2 Victoria Snively  2 Mark F Lew  11 Brian Griebner  2 Arthur Watts  12 Shan Gao  2 Emmanuelle Pourcher  13 Louisette Bond  13 Katie Kompoliti  14 Pinky Agarwal  15 Cherissa Sia  15 Mandar Jog  16 Linda Cole  16 Munira Sultana  16 Roger Kurlan  17 Irene Richard  18 Cheryl Deeley  18 Cheryl H Waters  19 Angel Figueroa  19 Ani Arkun  1 Matthew Brodsky  7 William G Ondo  20 Christine B Hunter  21 Joohi Jimenez-Shahed  21 Alicia Palao  21 Janis M Miyasaki  22 Julie So  22 James Tetrud  23 Liza Reys  23 Katharine Smith  23 Carlos Singer  24 Anita Blenke  24 David S Russell  25 Candace Cotto  25 Joseph H Friedman  26 Margaret Lannon  27 Lin Zhang  28 Edward Drasby  29 Rajeev Kumar  30 Thyagarajan Subramanian  31 Donna Stuppy Ford  31 David A Grimes  32 Diane Cote  32 Jennifer Conway  32 Andrew D Siderowf  33 Marian Leslie Evatt  34 Barbara Sommerfeld  6 Abraham N Lieberman  35 Michael S Okun  36 Ramon L Rodriguez  36 Stacy Merritt  36 Camille Louise Swartz  36 W R Wayne Martin  37 Pamela King  37 Natividad Stover  38 Stephanie Guthrie  38 Ray L Watts  38 Anwar Ahmed  39 Hubert H Fernandez  39 Adrienna Winters  39 Zoltan Mari  40 Ted M Dawson  40 Becky Dunlop  40 Andrew S Feigin  41 Barbara Shannon  41 Melissa Jill Nirenberg  42 Mattson Ogg  1 Samuel A Ellias  43 Cathi-Ann Thomas  43 Karen Frei  44 Ivan Bodis-Wollner  45 Sofya Glazman  45 Thomas Mayer  45 Robert A Hauser  46 Rajesh Pahwa  47 April Langhammer  47 Ranjit Ranawaya  48 Lorelei Derwent  48 Kapil D Sethi  49 Buff Farrow  49 Rajan Prakash  49 Irene Litvan  5 Annette Robinson  50 Alok Sahay  51 Maureen Gartner  51 Vanessa K Hinson  52 Samuel Markind  53 Melisa Pelikan  53 Joel S Perlmutter  54 Johanna Hartlein  54 Eric Molho  55 Sharon Evans  55 Charles H Adler  56 Amy Duffy  56 Marlene Lind  56 Lawrence Elmer  57 Kathy Davis  58 Julia Spears  58 Stephanie Wilson  58 Maureen A Leehey  59 Neal Hermanowicz  60 Shari Niswonger  60 Holly A Shill  61 Sanja Obradov  61 Alex Rajput  62 Marilyn Cowper  62 Stephanie Lessig  63 David Song  63 Deborah Fontaine  63 Cindy Zadikoff  64 Karen Williams  64 Karen A Blindauer  65 Jo Bergholte  65 Clara Schindler Propsom  65 Mark A Stacy  66 Joanne Field  66 Dragos Mihaila  67 Mark Chilton  67 Ergun Y Uc  68 Jeri Sieren  68 David K Simon  69 Lauren Kraics  69 Althea Silver  69 James T Boyd  70 Robert W Hamill  70 Christopher Ingvoldstad  70 Jennifer Young  70 Karen Thomas  71 Sandra K Kostyk  71 Joanne Wojcieszek  72 Ronald F Pfeiffer  73 Michel Panisset  74 Monica Beland  74 Stephen G Reich  75 Michelle Cines  75 Nancy Zappala  75 Jean Rivest  76 Richard Zweig  77 L Pepper Lumina  77 Colette Lynn Hilliard  78 Stephen Grill  40 Marye Kellermann  79 Paul Tuite  80 Susan Rolandelli  80 Un Jung Kang  81 Joan Young  81 Jayaraman Rao  82 Maureen M Cook  82 Lawrence Severt  83 Karyn Boyar  83
Collaborators, Affiliations
Free article
Clinical Trial

A randomized clinical trial of high-dosage coenzyme Q10 in early Parkinson disease: no evidence of benefit

Parkinson Study Group QE3 Investigators et al. JAMA Neurol. 2014 May.
Free article

Abstract

Importance: Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10), an antioxidant that supports mitochondrial function, has been shown in preclinical Parkinson disease (PD) models to reduce the loss of dopamine neurons, and was safe and well tolerated in early-phase human studies. A previous phase II study suggested possible clinical benefit.

Objective: To examine whether CoQ10 could slow disease progression in early PD.

Design, setting, and participants: A phase III randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trial at 67 North American sites consisting of participants 30 years of age or older who received a diagnosis of PD within 5 years and who had the following inclusion criteria: the presence of a rest tremor, bradykinesia, and rigidity; a modified Hoehn and Yahr stage of 2.5 or less; and no anticipated need for dopaminergic therapy within 3 months. Exclusion criteria included the use of any PD medication within 60 days, the use of any symptomatic PD medication for more than 90 days, atypical or drug-induced parkinsonism, a Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) rest tremor score of 3 or greater for any limb, a Mini-Mental State Examination score of 25 or less, a history of stroke, the use of certain supplements, and substantial recent exposure to CoQ10. Of 696 participants screened, 78 were found to be ineligible, and 18 declined participation.

Interventions: The remaining 600 participants were randomly assigned to receive placebo, 1200 mg/d of CoQ10, or 2400 mg/d of CoQ10; all participants received 1200 IU/d of vitamin E.

Main outcomes and measures: Participants were observed for 16 months or until a disability requiring dopaminergic treatment. The prospectively defined primary outcome measure was the change in total UPDRS score (Parts I-III) from baseline to final visit. The study was powered to detect a 3-point difference between an active treatment and placebo.

Results: The baseline characteristics of the participants were well balanced, the mean age was 62.5 years, 66% of participants were male, and the mean baseline total UPDRS score was 22.7. A total of 267 participants required treatment (94 received placebo, 87 received 1200 mg/d of CoQ10, and 86 received 2400 mg/d of CoQ10), and 65 participants (29 who received placebo, 19 who received 1200 mg/d of CoQ10, and 17 who received 2400 mg/d of CoQ10) withdrew prematurely. Treatments were well tolerated with no safety concerns. The study was terminated after a prespecified futility criterion was reached. At study termination, both active treatment groups showed slight adverse trends relative to placebo. Adjusted mean changes (worsening) in total UPDRS scores from baseline to final visit were 6.9 points (placebo), 7.5 points (1200 mg/d of CoQ10; P = .49 relative to placebo), and 8.0 points (2400 mg/d of CoQ10; P = .21 relative to placebo).

Conclusions and relevance: Coenzyme Q10 was safe and well tolerated in this population, but showed no evidence of clinical benefit.

Trial registration: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00740714.

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