Parkinson’s disease is now considered to be a spreading disease caused by the aggregation of abnormal alpha-synuclein.1 According to Braak et al., in stage I of the disease, alpha-synuclein pathology is found in the olfactory bulb and the dorsal nucleus of the vagus nerve,2 as well as in the enteric nervous system (Auerbach’s and Meissner’s plexuses).3 These observations fit well with the clinical features of hyposmia, constipation, depression and/or rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behaviour disorder, which characterize the so-called prodromal phase of Parkinson’s disease. Parkinson’s disease is a combination of motor and non-motor symptoms; the cardinal motor symptoms of akinesia, rigidity and resting tremor are caused by dopamine deficiency in the nigrostriatal pathway. For this reason, motor symptoms are predominantly treated with dopamine replacement therapy.
Guidelines, such as those of the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, suggest that biologically young patients should first be treated with a dopamine agonist, and elderly patients, or patients in the more advanced stages of Parkinson’s disease, should preferentially receive levodopa.4 Due to its high efficacy and few associated side effects, levodopa is still regarded as the gold standard. Unfortunately, levodopa, even when administered with a decarboxylase inhibitor, such as carbidopa or benserazide, has a short plasma half-life. Thus, after initial high efficacy and consequent patient satisfaction, patients experience motor fluctuations even within the first year of treatment. The first, and most abundant, motor fluctuation is wearing-off,5 caused by a reduction in the efficacy of levodopa as the disease evolves, such that each dose of levodopa is effective for a shorter time, and the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease return or worsen before the next dose is due. Following the next dose of levodopa, the symptoms improve. Wearing-off is underdiagnosed, and it is mandatory to ask the patient about this motor problem.6 There are several drugs that can be used to manage wearing-off, the most frequently used of which are catechol-O-methlytransferase (COMT) inhibitors, monoamine oxidase type B inhibitors and long-acting dopamine agonists.
In this review, we will discuss the properties, preclinical data, pivotal studies and real-world data of the third-generation COMT inhibitor, opicapone. Oral opicapone is approved in the European Union, USA, Japan, Australia and other countries as adjunctive therapy to preparations of levodopa/DOPA decarboxylase inhibitors in patients with Parkinson’s disease and end-of-dose motor fluctuations7 or OFF episodes.8
Preclinical data
So far, there are three COMT inhibitors available. Entacapone and opicapone inhibit this enzyme exclusively in the peripheral tissues, whilst tolcapone also inhibits central COMT. As tolcapone has been known to cause deleterious liver enzyme increases in some patients and fulminant liver failure in others, it can be used only as a second-line medication and with special precautions.9 The inhibition of COMT blocks the degradation of levodopa to 3-O-methyldopa (3-OMD) in peripheral tissues, resulting in more levodopa entering the blood and passing through the blood–brain barrier, increasing its bioavailability. Thus, COMT inhibitors add to the function of decarboxylase inhibitors. Decreasing the concentration of 3-OMD is also helpful because 3-OMD may compete with levodopa for passage across the blood–brain barrier.
As mentioned above, opicapone is a third-generation COMT inhibitor, following on firstly from the introduction of pyrogallol and tropolone, and then the introduction of entacapone and tolcapone.10 Similarly to entacapone, opicapone exclusively targets peripheral COMT, and there are other major differences between the two drugs. Opicapone is a hydrophilic 1,2,4-oxadiazole analogue with a pyridine N-oxide at position 3, which leads to prolonged action (inhibition) and less cell toxicity. Entacapone is a short-acting, peripherally-selective inhibitor, which has to be administered with each dose of levodopa. Tolcapone is longer acting and more potent than either opicapone or entacapone. Kiss et al. have nicely summarized the discovery of the long-acting opicapone,11 and an excellent evaluation of the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and tolerability of opicapone in humans was undertaken by Almeida et al.10
Opicapone shows an extremely high affinity to COMT, which results in a low dissociation rate and a long duration of action in vivo, both in animals, such as monkeys, and in humans.12,13 In animal studies (rats and monkeys), opicapone proved to be safe with respect to liver metabolism, and the central nervous, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal and pulmonary systems. One hour after exposure of rats to the same dose levels of the individual inhibitors, COMT activity was inhibited by 99% with opicapone, 82% with tolcapone, and 68% with entacapone.13 Nine hours after administration, COMT was no longer inhibited by entacapone, and was only inhibited by 16% by tolcapone, whilst opicapone continued to inhibit COMT activity by 91%. The finding of increased levodopa in the brain of monkeys treated with opicapone supports these findings.12
Early phase clinical studies
Similar results have been demonstrated in clinical trials in humans, where no differences were found between Asian and Caucasian healthy adult volunteers in the pharmacodynamics of 5–50 mg/day opicapone.15 The area under the curve for levodopa increased by 35% when 50 mg of opicapone was added to levodopa treatment in patients with Parkinson’s disease.16 Opicapone is primarily metabolized in the liver, and the resulting inactive metabolites are eliminated by excretion in the faeces and urine. Caution is only advised in patients with moderate hepatic impairment (Child–Pugh B), in whom dose adjustment is necessary. Opicapone is not recommended in patients with Child–Pugh C.
The study by Almeida et al., mentioned above, was the first trial of opicapone in humans, and was performed in healthy men in a single centre in Rennes, France, with 10, 25, 50, 100, 200, 400, 800 and 1,200 mg opicapone using a single-dose escalation, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind design.10 In a second analysis, using a single dose of 50 mg opicapone, interaction with food was tested in a fasting and non-fasting situation.10 Opicapone was well tolerated at all of the doses tested. The maximum plasma concentration was equivalent to the administered opicapone doses. The half-life of opicapone-induced COMT inhibition in human erythrocytes from these healthy volunteers was 61.6 hours and was independent of the dose. Rocha et al. also assessed the tolerability, pharmacokinetics and inhibitory effect of opicapone in healthy male subjects following repeated doses of opicapone.16 Their study reaffirmed the previous finding that the inhibition of COMT by opicapone is of long duration, and showed that once-daily dosing of opicapone is adequate, which may provide an advantage over entacapone and tolcapone.16
Pivotal trials
There are two phase III, double-blind, multicentre, multinational trials – BIPARK-I17 and BIPARK-II18 – in patients with Parkinson’s disease with end-of-dose motor fluctuations. Both were short-term trials with an observation period of 14–15 weeks. BIPARK-I also evaluated the non-inferiority of opicapone to entacapone.
In BIPARK-I, 600 patients were randomly assigned to opicapone, entacapone or placebo. The study was performed in 106 specialized centres in Europe and Russia.17 The primary endpoint was the change from baseline to end of study treatment in absolute time in the OFF state, as assessed by daily paper patient diaries. A total of 120 patients receiving placebo, 120 receiving 200 mg entacapone with each levodopa dose, 119 receiving 5 mg opicapone once daily, 116 receiving 25 mg opicapone once daily and 115 patients receiving 50 mg opicapone once daily, in addition to levodopa, were included in the full analysis set, and 537 patients were included in the per-protocol set. The mean change in time in the OFF state was -56.0 minutes for placebo, -96.3 minutes for entacapone, -91.3 minutes for 5 mg opicapone, -85.9 minutes for 25 mg opicapone and -116.8 minutes for 50 mg opicapone. Both a significant superiority to placebo and non-inferiority to entacapone were demonstrated when using 50 mg opicapone. Treatment-emergent adverse events were reported in 50% of placebo-treated patients, 57% of the entacapone group, 52% of the 5 mg opicapone group, 55% of the 25 mg opicapone group and 54% of the 50 mg opicapone group. The most common adverse event was dyskinesia (18 out of 115 patients treated with 50 mg opicapone). The authors conclude that the addition of 50 mg opicapone to levodopa treatment in patients with Parkinson’s disease and end-of-dose fluctuations could enable a simplified drug regimen that allows individual tailoring of the existing levodopa daily regimen. The authors postulate that the addition of opicapone in these patients has the potential to reduce the daily levodopa dose and extend the dosing interval, thus reducing the number of doses and perhaps increasing adherence.
In BIPARK-II, Lees et al. evaluated the efficacy and safety of 25 and 50 mg/day dosages of opicapone as adjunct to levodopa therapy in patients with Parkinson’s disease experiencing end-of-dose motor fluctuations, in a phase III, international, multicentre, outpatient, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study.18 As in BIPARK-I, the observation period was 14–15 weeks, and patients with end-of-dose fluctuations and total awake OFF-time (excluding early morning akinesia) of at least 1.5 hours received 25 or 50 mg/day of opicapone, followed by a 1-year open-label phase, during which all patients received active treatment with opicapone 25mg or 50mg. The primary efficacy outcome of the double-blind phase was the change from baseline in absolute OFF-time versus placebo, based on patient diaries. The open-label phase focused on maintenance of treatment effect in OFF-time.
A total of 427 patients (258 men and 169 women with a mean age of 63.1 ± 8.8 years) were randomized to a 25 mg/day (n=129) or 50 mg/day (n=154) dosage of opicapone or to placebo (n=144). Of these, 367 patients completed the double-blind phase and entered the open-label phase. Two hundred and eighty-six patients (78%) completed 1 year of open-label treatment. At the end of the double-blind phase, the least squares mean change (standard error [SE]) in OFF-time was -64.5 (14.4) minutes for the placebo group, -101.7 (14.9) minutes for the 25 mg/day opicapone group, and -118.8 (13.8) minutes for the 50 mg/day opicapone group. Only opicapone treatment in the 50 mg group was statistically significantly more efficacious than placebo. The OFF-time reduction in the 50 mg group was sustained throughout the open-label phase (-126.3 minutes at 1-year open-label endpoint). The most common adverse events in the opicapone versus placebo groups were dyskinesia, constipation and dry mouth. Fifty-one patients (14%) were discontinued from the study during the double-blind phase. The efficacy of 50 mg opicapone was similar in both the BIPARK-I and BIPARK-II studies, and both studies showed that some patients might develop dyskinesia after the addition of opicapone; this can be controlled by decreasing the total levodopa dose.
Ferreira et al. analysed the efficacy of opicapone (25 and 50 mg) as adjunct therapy to levodopa in a pooled population from BIPARK-I and BIPARK-II. In addition, they evaluated the outcome in all patients who underwent the 1-year open-label extensions of both BIPARK-I and BIPARK-II.19 Double-blind treatment with opicapone (25 and 50 mg) significantly reduced absolute daily OFF-time from a baseline of 6.1–6.6 hours. The mean change in OFF-time versus placebo was -35.1 minutes (p=0.0106) for the 25 mg dose and -58.1 minutes (p<0.0001) for the 50 mg dose. Accordingly, significant increases in ON-time without troublesome dyskinesia were recorded (p<0.05 and p<0.0001 for the 25 and 50 mg doses, respectively). Interestingly, no significant differences were observed for ON-time with troublesome dyskinesia between placebo and opicapone. Patients recorded their mobility using diaries during the open-label phase. There was a maintenance of effect for patients previously treated with opicapone 50 mg. The group previously treated with the 25 mg dose benefitted with further optimization of therapy during the open-label phase, whilst switching from placebo to opicapone led to significant reductions in OFF-time and increased ON-time. This study demonstrated a persistent efficacy of opicapone during the observation period of about 16 months with a reduction in OFF-time and gain in ON-time without troublesome dyskinesia.
In a more recent work, Ferreira et al. described patients who had initially been treated with entacapone in the double-blind trial BIPARK-I, then were switched to opicapone and followed in an open-label phase for 12 months.20 This cohort improved with a further 39.3 minutes reduction of OFF-time from baseline. Thus, this post hoc analysis supports the conclusion that opicapone may be more efficacious than entacapone in reducing OFF-time.
Real-world data
The open-label OPTIPARK trial on the efficacy and safety of opicapone was recently performed in the UK and Germany.21 This was a prospective, open-label, single-arm study that included patients with Parkinson’s disease with motor fluctuations. The observation period was 3 months in Germany and 6 months in the UK. The primary endpoint was the change in Clinician’s Global Impression of Change scale (CGI-C) after treatment with 50 mg/day opicapone in clinical practice. Secondary endpoints included safety and efficacy, and changes in Patient’s Global Impression of Change scale (PGI-C), Unified Parkinson Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS), quality of life (Parkinson’s disease Questionnaire-8) and non-motor symptoms (Non-Motor Symptoms Scale [NMSS]). Male and female patients (≥30 years of age) with idiopathic Parkinson’s disease (based upon the UK Parkinson’s Disease Society Brain Bank Clinical Diagnostic Criteria), and with end-of-dose akinesia/wearing-off (using The Wearing-off Questionnaire) were included in the study. Additional inclusion criteria included Hoehn and Yahr stages I–IV (during ON periods), treatment with 3–7 daily doses of levodopa/decarboxylase inhibitor or triple therapy with entacapone, and the clinical impression of the treating neurologist. Exclusion criteria were atypical Parkinson’s disease, unpredictable OFF periods and severe hepatic impairment (Child–Pugh C).
Five hundred and six patients were enrolled in 68 centres across Germany and the UK. There were four screening failures, 495 patients received at least one dose of opicapone and 393 patients completed the first 3 months; 109 patients prematurely terminated treatment (non-serious adverse events n=76; withdrew consent n=14; serious adverse events n=8; lack of efficacy n=3; development of exclusion criterion n=2; and other n=4). The 495 patients had a mean age of 67.7 years, two-thirds were men, all were Caucasian, the mean duration of Parkinson’s disease was 102 months and the mean duration of motor fluctuations was 30 months. Total daily mean levodopa dose was 580 mg for all patients, with additional rasagiline in 28%, pramipexole in 25%, ropinirole in 22%, amantadine in 21%, rotigotine in 14%, safinamide in 14% and piribedil in 9%.21
The main outcome of this open-label study was that after 3 months of treatment with opicapone, clinical improvement was judged to have occurred in 71.3% of the patients by GCI-C scale and 76.9% of the patients by PGI-C scale, overall. After 6 months, the UK sub-cohort (n=95) had improved imrpoved further (85.3% by GCI-C scale). UPDRS Part II (activities of daily living during OFF period) scores improved by 3.0 ± 4.6 points (p<0.0001) after 3 months of treatment. Quality of life and NMSS also significantly improved (change in NMSS -6.8 ± 19.7 points). Amongst non-motor symptoms, which improved with the addition of opicapone, sleep/fatigue and mood/cognition were the most responsive. After the 3-month treatment period, most patients had unchanged levodopa doses and dosing frequency.21
Side effects, mostly considered mild or moderate, occurred in 74.9% of patients. Thirty-four (7.1%) patients developed serious side effects. The most frequent treatment-related side effects were dyskinesia (11.5%), dry mouth (6.5%) and dizziness (4.8%). Since diarrhoea is a common side effect of entacapone, it is interesting to note that only 0.6% of patients in the OPTIPARK trial developed diarrhoea.
In summary, OPTIPARK presented real-world clinical data on the efficacy and safety of 50 mg opicapone. The results were very similar to the two pivotal studies discussed above. After 3 months, opicapone caused significant improvements, not only in UPDRS and CGI-C/PGI-C scores, but also in quality of life and non-motor symptoms. Side effects were in the same range as in the pivotal studies, with dyskinesia being the most frequent one.