Hans-Christoph Diener, Kathleen A Day, Sarah Lipsius, Sheena K Aurora, Nada A Hindiyeh, Holland C Detke
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Chronic migraine (CM) is a highly disabling form of migraine in which patients have ≥ 15 headache days per month, of which at least 8 have the features of migraine. Galcanezumab is a monoclonal antibody to calcitonin gene-related peptide which is approved for the preventive treatment of migraine. Ability to convert patients from chronic migraine frequency to episodic migraine (EM) frequency is a clinically relevant and desirable outcome when prescribing preventive treatments to patients with CM.
Methods: Patients aged 18-65 years with an ICHD-3β diagnosis of CM were randomized 2:1:1 to receive monthly injections of placebo (N = 558), galcanezumab 120 mg with a 240-mg loading dose (N = 278), or galcanezumab 240 mg (N = 277) during a 3-month double-blind period of the phase 3 REGAIN trial. Patients could subsequently enter a 9-month open-label extension in which they received galcanezumab 120 mg or 240 mg/month per investigator's discretion. In this post-hoc analysis, we assessed the percentages of patients who shifted to EM (< 8 migraine headache days or < 15 headache days/month), low frequency EM (LFEM; <8 migraine headache days/month), and very low frequency EM (VLFEM; <4 migraine headache days/month) for at least 3 consecutive months. Double-blind percentage comparisons versus placebo represent modeled estimates from raw rates.
Results: At baseline, patients had a mean of 19.4 migraine headache days per month (SD = 4.5) and 21.4 headache days per month (SD = 4.1). During the 3-month double-blind treatment period, a greater percentage of galcanezumab-treated patients shifted to EM frequency and maintained it across all 3 months (31.5%) than did placebo-treated patients (19.8%, p < 0.001). Among galcanezumab-treated patients across the entire 12-month trial, 65.1% shifted from CM to EM frequency, with 44.2% shifting to LFEM and 21.5% shifting to VLFEM for ≥ 3 consecutive months. Proportions of patients shifting from CM to EM frequency for ≥ 3 consecutive months and until last patient visit were: 55.0% to EM; 33.4% to LFEM; 13.9% to VLFEM.
Conclusion: These results suggest that galcanezumab helped a majority of patients convert from chronic to episodic migraine frequency over the course of this 12-month study.
Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02614261, first registered November 25, 2015.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Headache and Pain, a peer-reviewed open-access journal published under the BMC brand, a part of Springer Nature, is dedicated to researchers engaged in all facets of headache and related pain syndromes. It encompasses epidemiology, public health, basic science, translational medicine, clinical trials, and real-world data.
With a multidisciplinary approach, The Journal of Headache and Pain addresses headache medicine and related pain syndromes across all medical disciplines. It particularly encourages submissions in clinical, translational, and basic science fields, focusing on pain management, genetics, neurology, and internal medicine. The journal publishes research articles, reviews, letters to the Editor, as well as consensus articles and guidelines, aimed at promoting best practices in managing patients with headaches and related pain.