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Patient and Provider Experiences and Attitudes toward Rytary

S. Horn, D. Coughlin, J. Chou, F. Wang, M. Stacy, R. Dolhun, C. Kopil, N. Amondikar, A. Deik, H. Sarva (Philadelphia, PA, USA)

Meeting: 2018 International Congress

Abstract Number: 394

Keywords: Parkinsonism

Session Information

Date: Saturday, October 6, 2018

Session Title: Parkinson’s Disease: Clinical Trials, Pharmacology And Treatment

Session Time: 1:45pm-3:15pm

Location: Hall 3FG

Objective: To survey Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients and providers about their experiences using Rytary, an oral extended release carbidopa/levodopa capsule (ER C/L).

Background: ER C/L demonstrated in clinical trials to decrease OFF time and improve ON time without increasing troublesome dyskinesia when compared to other levodopa formulations (Dhall & Kreitzman 2016). However, individual provider and patient experiences vary, and barriers to using ER C/L exist.

Methods: 801 PD patients and 250 physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants completed separate online nationwide surveys to determine utility, side effects, satisfaction and barriers to using ER C/L.

Results: Movement disorders specialists were 27% of provider respondents; 44% were general neurologists. The top reasons providers chose ER C/L include reducing OFF time (69%) and reducing medication dosing frequency (32%). Reduction in OFF time was reported by 74% of providers but by only 50% of patients. Among providers, 71% reported reduction in dyskinesia, whereas only 27% of patients experiencing dyskinesia reported a decrease and 32% reported worsening dyskinesia. Dry mouth (33%) and fatigue (25%) were the most common side effects reported by patients. The proportion of patients reporting improvements in quality of life, motor symptoms, and non-motor symptoms with ER C/L were 51%, 55%, and 38% respectively. Patient perceived quality of counseling prior to initiation of ER C/L correlated positively with satisfaction (p <0.001). Providers cited high cost (38%), need for prior authorization (30%), and complicated dosing and conversion processes (12%) as most common barriers. Patients reported high cost (52%), inconvenient dosing (37%) and suboptimal symptom control (32%) as challenges. Twenty-six percent of patients discontinued ER C/L; the most common reasons were side effects (40%) and suboptimal symptom control (21%).

Conclusions: These large surveys evaluated patient and provider experiences with ER C/L. Both noted reduction in OFF time as a benefit. Patients reported moderate satisfaction with motor benefits and quality of life, but less satisfaction with the effect on non-motor symptoms. Providers noted a reduction in dyskinesia greater than what patients reported. High out-of-pocket costs and complicated conversion and dosing regimens were common barriers. There is continued need for accessible symptomatic therapies for PD to serve unmet patient needs.

References: Dhall, R., & Kreitzman, D. L. (2016). Advances in levodopa therapy for Parkinson disease Review of RYTARY (carbidopa and levodopa) clinical efficacy and safety. Neurology, 86(14 Supplement 1), S13-S24.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

S. Horn, D. Coughlin, J. Chou, F. Wang, M. Stacy, R. Dolhun, C. Kopil, N. Amondikar, A. Deik, H. Sarva. Patient and Provider Experiences and Attitudes toward Rytary [abstract]. Mov Disord. 2018; 33 (suppl 2). https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/patient-and-provider-experiences-and-attitudes-toward-rytary/. Accessed June 14, 2025.
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