Evaluating the Burden of Sleep, Anxiety, and Depression in People with Advanced Parkinson’s Disease: A US Real-world Study
Sarah Horn1, Okeanis Vaou1, Ashwini Parab2, Shihan Jin3, Siting Wang2, Connie Yan2, Megha Shah2, Joohi Jimenez Shahed4
1UT Health San Antonio, 2AbbVie Inc., 3University of Southern California, 4Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Objective:
To compare the presence of sleep, anxiety and depressive disorders, and their associated medication use in individuals with advanced Parkinson’s Disease (aPD), PD, and the general population (no-PD).
Background:
As PD advances, non-motor symptoms including sleep and mood (e.g., anxiety, depressive) disorders arise, complicating medication regimens and impacting quality-of-life (QoL). Quantification of this increased burden in aPD in real-world settings remains scarce. 
Design/Methods:
Retrospective analysis using US Commercial and Medicare Advantage claims data from 01/2016–06/2024. Individuals meeting aPD proxy criteria (levodopa-equivalent daily dose ≥1000mg) were propensity-score matched by age, gender, health insurance plan, comorbidity, US region, and index year, to PD (excluding aPD) and no-PD. Device-aided therapy users for aPD were excluded. Descriptive statistics included t-tests and Pearson chi-squared tests.
Results:
The study included 9,477 aPD/PD pairs, and 9,477/47,385aPD/no-PD pairs after matching. 17% of aPD individuals had both sleep and mood disorders compared to 13% in PD and 5% in no-PD. Sleep disorders were  more  frequent in aPD (30%) compared to PD (22%), and three times that of no-PD (9%), with insomnia, sleep apnea, and parasomnia/RBD being the most common. Depressive (30%) and anxiety disorders (27%) were more frequent in aPD compared to PD (27% and 24%, respectively) and no-PD ( 12%, each). Additionally, aPD individuals take more pills per day than PD and twice as those in no-PD for treating these comorbidities. A greater proportion of aPD compared to PD and no-PD were taking selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (31% vs 27% and 14%, respectively) and benzodiazepines (24% vs 19% and 11%, respectively).
Conclusions:

Sleep and mood disorders, and associated medication use was significantly higher in individuals with aPD than PD and no-PD. Further research is needed to investigate the burden of these, and other debilitating neuropsychiatric disorders on QoL and healthcare system in aPD.

10.1212/WNL.0000000000209047
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