Pimavanserin for psychosis in Parkinson's disease dementia: Subgroup analysis of the HARMONY Trial

Daniel Weintraub, Alberto J. Espay, Vibhash D. Sharma, Pierre N. Tariot, Victor Abler, Sanjeev Pathak, Srdjan Stankovic

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction: Pimavanserin is FDA-approved to treat Parkinson's disease (PD) psychosis. We analyzed the effect of pimavanserin on psychosis in the PD dementia (PDD) subgroup from the phase 3 HARMONY trial. Methods: This subgroup analysis included PDD patients enrolled in an international, multicenter, randomized discontinuation study of pimavanserin for dementia-related psychosis. PDD patients with moderate-to-severe psychosis, age 50–90 years, received pimavanserin 34 mg/day for 12 weeks (open-label period). Those with a sustained psychosis response to pimavanserin at weeks 8 and 12 were randomized during the double-blind period to continue pimavanserin or receive placebo. Primary efficacy endpoint was time to psychosis relapse as measured by the SAPS-H + D and CGI-I. Safety was assessed, as were effects on motor symptoms and cognitive abilities using the ESRS-A and MMSE. Results: 392 patients were enrolled in HARMONY (mean age: 72.6 years; 38.8 % female): 59 had PDD; 49/59 remained on pimavanserin during the open-label period (safety analysis set), and 36/49 were randomized to pimavanserin (n = 16) or placebo (n = 20) in the double-blind phase (intent-to-treat analysis set). Risk of psychosis relapse was lower with pimavanserin 34 mg compared with placebo in the double-blind phase (HR = 0.052; 95 % CI 0.016–0.166; 1-sided nominal p < 0.001). During the open-label period, 46.9 % experienced a treatment-emergent adverse event; event incidence was similar across arms in the double-blind period. Pimavanserin did not adversely affect motor or cognitive function in either treatment phase. Conclusions: Pimavanserin significantly reduced risk of psychosis relapse in patients with PDD, was well tolerated, and did not worsen motor or cognitive function.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number105951
JournalParkinsonism and Related Disorders
Volume119
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2024

Keywords

  • Delusions
  • Hallucinations
  • Parkinson's disease
  • Pimavanserin

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Neurology
  • Geriatrics and Gerontology
  • Clinical Neurology

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