Trial results for prasinezumab in participants with early Parkinson's Disease were posted on 2025-12-02. The study showed that participants treated with prasinezumab had a median time to confirmed motor progression event of 61.1 weeks, compared to 49.7 weeks for those receiving placebo. This suggests a delay in disease progression.

Background

Prasinezumab is an investigational drug evaluated for the treatment of Early Parkinson's Disease. The study aimed to assess its efficacy and safety in participants who were already on stable symptomatic Parkinson's Disease medication.

Trial design

The study (NCT04777331) was a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 2 trial. It enrolled 586 participants with Early Parkinson's Disease who were on stable symptomatic medication. Participants received either intravenous prasinezumab or placebo to evaluate efficacy and safety.

Key results

Results from the trial indicated several differences between the prasinezumab and placebo groups across various measures of disease progression:

What this means

The trial results for prasinezumab in early Parkinson's Disease indicate a consistent trend towards delaying motor progression and other measures of disease worsening compared to placebo. While several hazard ratios were below 1.0, suggesting a benefit, the p-values for these outcomes did not reach conventional statistical significance (e.g., 0.0657 for time to confirmed motor progression). However, the observed longer median times to various progression events and a smaller mean change in MDS-UPDRS Part III score for the prasinezumab group suggest a potential clinical benefit that warrants further investigation. These findings provide important data for understanding the drug's activity in this patient population.

Source

The information regarding these trial results was obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov, a public database of clinical studies. The results for study NCT04777331, titled "A Study to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Intravenous Prasinezumab in Participants With Early Parkinson's Disease," were posted on 2025-12-02 on clinicaltrials.gov.