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Anti-Parkinson medication
Anti-Parkinson medication is a Dopamine agonist Small molecule drug developed by Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. It is currently in Phase 2 development for Parkinson's disease, Flu-like syndrome. Also known as: Carbidopa/levodopa, pramipexole, ropinirole, amantadine.
This drug works by increasing dopamine levels in the brain to alleviate Parkinson's symptoms.
This drug works by increasing dopamine levels in the brain to alleviate Parkinson's symptoms. Used for Parkinson's disease, Flu-like syndrome.
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Baseline phase 2 → approval rate
+15.3pp
Industry-wide phase 2 drugs reach approval ~15.3% of the time (BIO/Informa 2023 industry benchmark across all therapeutic areas). -
CNS / neurology attrition
-3.0pp
CNS drugs have historically high Phase 3 failure rates (notably in Alzheimer disease + major depression).
| Regulator | Country | Likely year | Lag vs FDA |
|---|---|---|---|
| FDA | US | 2031–2034 | — |
| EMA | EU | 2032–2035 | +0.7 yr |
| MHRA | GB | 2032–2035 | +0.7 yr |
| Health Canada | CA | 2032–2036 | +0.9 yr |
| TGA | AU | 2032–2036 | +1.2 yr |
| PMDA | JP | 2032–2036 | +1.5 yr |
| NMPA | CN | 2033–2037 | +2.3 yr |
| MFDS | KR | 2032–2036 | +1.4 yr |
| CDSCO | IN | 2032–2037 | +1.8 yr |
| ANVISA | BR | 2033–2037 | +2.3 yr |
Hover any row for the lag rationale. Lag estimates are reduced when the drug has FDA Breakthrough or EMA PRIME designation (sponsors file globally in parallel).
Estimate based on the BIO/Informa industry phase transition rates plus per-drug modifiers for therapeutic area, sponsor type, FDA designations, mechanism, and trial design. Per-jurisdiction lags from Tufts CSDD international approval studies. Not investment, clinical or regulatory advice. Methodology: /methodology#likelihood.
At a glance
| Generic name | Anti-Parkinson medication |
|---|---|
| Also known as | Carbidopa/levodopa, pramipexole, ropinirole, amantadine, tolcapone |
| Sponsor | Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center |
| Drug class | Dopamine agonist |
| Target | Dopamine receptor |
| Modality | Small molecule |
| Therapeutic area | Neurology |
| Phase | Phase 2 |
Mechanism of action
It does this by inhibiting the enzyme responsible for breaking down dopamine, allowing more dopamine to be available for the brain's use. This leads to improved motor function and reduced symptoms of Parkinson's disease.
Approved indications
- Parkinson's disease
- Flu-like syndrome
Common side effects
- Nausea
- Dizziness
- Headache
- Fatigue
- Dyskinesia
Key clinical trials
- Long-Term Observational Study on Effectiveness and Safety of Lecigon in Patients With Advanced Parkinson's Disease
- Role of Pentoxifylline and Celecoxib in Parkinsonism (PHASE2)
- Gait Analysis in Neurological Disease
- Investigating the Neural Signature of Freezing of Gait in Parkinson's Disease
- Neuroprotective Effects of Long-term TaVNS in Early Parkinson's Disease Patients (NA)
- An Open-label Study on the Clinical Efficacy of tDCS Intervention in PD (NA)
- Effects of a Periodic Repetitive Transcranial Magenetic Stimulation in Parkinson Disease (NA)
- Safety and Efficacy of Botulinum Toxin A for Treatment of Overactive Bladder in Parkinson's Disease (EARLY_PHASE1)
Primary sources
Every claim on this page is sourced from regulatory or scientific primary sources. See our editorial policy for full methodology.
| Source | Used for |
|---|---|
| ClinicalTrials.gov | Trial enrolment, design, endpoints, results |
Competitive intelligence
For the full competitive landscape — auto-detected comparators, recent regulatory actions across the set, upcoming PDUFA, patent timeline, sponsor landscape:
- Anti-Parkinson medication CI brief — competitive landscape report
- Anti-Parkinson medication updates RSS · CI watch RSS
- Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center portfolio CI
Frequently asked questions about Anti-Parkinson medication
What is Anti-Parkinson medication?
How does Anti-Parkinson medication work?
What is Anti-Parkinson medication used for?
Who makes Anti-Parkinson medication?
Is Anti-Parkinson medication also known as anything else?
What drug class is Anti-Parkinson medication in?
What development phase is Anti-Parkinson medication in?
What are the side effects of Anti-Parkinson medication?
What does Anti-Parkinson medication target?
Related
- Drug class: All Dopamine agonist drugs
- Target: All drugs targeting Dopamine receptor
- Manufacturer: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center — full pipeline
- Therapeutic area: All drugs in Neurology
- Indication: Drugs for Parkinson's disease
- Indication: Drugs for Flu-like syndrome
- Also known as: Carbidopa/levodopa, pramipexole, ropinirole, amantadine, tolcapone