Constipation in Early-onset Parkinson’s Disease: Frequency, Time of Onset and Association with Mortality
Capucine Piat1, Aidan Mullan1, Khaled Ghoniem1, Pierpaolo Turcano1, James Bower1, Adil Bharucha1, Rodolfo Savica1, Eduardo Benarroch1
1Mayo Clinic
Objective:

To determine the frequency and time of onset of constipation in patients with Early-Onset Parkinson’s Disease (EOPD) and to explore the association between constipation and mortality.

Background:

Constipation is a frequent non-motor symptom in Parkinson disease (PD), affecting up to 80% of patients. However, little is known about the frequency of constipation in EOPD.

Design/Methods:

We included all patients with a PD motor symptom onset before the age of 50 (EOPD) that presented to the Mayo Clinic Health System from 1991 to 2010. A movement disorder specialist reviewed their medical records to confirm the clinical diagnosis of EOPD. The presence and time of onset of constipation was reported through a systematic review of patients’ medical records.  We excluded secondary causes of constipation (drug induced or post-surgical). A Cox proportional-hazard regression was used to assess the association between constipation and patient mortality. Models were adjusted for patients’ sex and age at motor onset.

Results:

827 patients were included. The median age at motor symptom onset was 42 years. 65 patients had died at the time of data collection. Constipation was present in 392 (47.4%) patients. In 95.4% of patients, constipation occurred following motor symptom onset. The median time from motor symptom onset to constipation was 6 years. The presence of constipation was associated with a higher risk of mortality (HR 5.13, p<0.001). In an adjusted analysis patients’ age and sex, constipation was associated with a four-fold increase in mortality rate (HR 4.35, p < 0.001).

Conclusions:

Constipation affects nearly half of EOPD patients from our clinical cohort. It developed post-motor-symptom-onset in 95.4% of patients. Constipation was associated with a four-fold increase in mortality in this EOPD population. Our findings contrast with our previous study on Late-Onset PD in Olmsted-County, Minnesota, where we reported constipation in 50% of patients, without an increased risk of mortality.

10.1212/WNL.0000000000204577