| Literature DB >> 22592864 |
Marco Bartolini1, Maria Adelaide Giamberardino, Carlo Lisotto, Paolo Martelletti, Davide Moscato, Biagio Panascia, Lidia Savi, Luigi Alberto Pini, Grazia Sances, Patrizia Santoro, Giorgio Zanchin, Stefano Omboni, Michel D Ferrari, Brigida Fierro, Filippo Brighina.
Abstract
The objective of the study was to compare the efficacy and safety of frovatriptan and almotriptan in women with menstrually related migraine (IHS Classification of Headache disorders) enrolled in a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, cross-over study. Patients received frovatriptan 2.5 mg or almotriptan 12.5 mg in a randomized sequence: after treating 3 episodes of migraine in no more than 3 months with the first treatment, the patient was switched to the other treatment. 67 of the 96 female patients of the intention-to-treat population of the main study had regular menstrual cycles and were thus included in this subgroup analysis. 77 migraine attacks classified as related to menses were treated with frovatriptan and 78 with almotriptan. Rate of pain relief at 2 and 4 h was 36 and 53 % for frovatriptan and 41 and 50 % for almotriptan (p = NS between treatments). Rate of pain free at 2 and 4 h was 19 and 47 % with frovatriptan and 29 and 54 % for almotriptan (p = NS). At 24 h, 62 % of frovatriptan-treated and 67 % of almotriptan-treated patients had pain relief, while 60 versus 67 % were pain free (p = NS). Recurrence at 24 h was significantly (p < 0.05) lower with frovatriptan (8 vs. 21 % almotriptan). This was the case also at 48 h (9 vs. 24 %, p < 0.05). Frovatriptan was as effective as almotriptan in the immediate treatment of menstrually related migraine attacks. However, it showed a more favorable sustained effect, as shown by a lower rate of migraine recurrence.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22592864 PMCID: PMC3381066 DOI: 10.1007/s10194-012-0455-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Demographic and clinical baseline data of the 114 patients of the main study [37] and of the subgroup of 67 women with menstrually related migraine
| Main study ( | Menstruating women ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years, means ± SD) | 40 ± 10 | 37 ± 8 | NS |
| Height (cm, means ± SD) | 165 ± 6 | 164 ± 6 | NS |
| Weight (kg, means ± SD) | 65 ± 12 | 62 ± 10 | NS |
| Age at onset of migraine (years, means ± SD) | 18 ± 8 | 17 ± 7 | NS |
| Migraine attack duration >2 days ( | 29 (25) | 16 (24) | NS |
| MIDAS score (means ± SD) | 23 ± 16 | 23 ± 16 | NS |
| No use of triptans in the previous 3 months ( | 93 (82) | 46 (69) | <0.05 |
| Moderate or severe attacks ( | 532 (80) | 133 (86) | NS |
| Patients with at least one moderate or severe attack ( | 111 (97) | 64 (96) | NS |
Data are shown as mean (±SD), or absolute (n) and relative frequency (%)
aNumbers refer to number and frequency of attacks as respect to overall number of attacks
Main study endpoints in the two study treatment groups
| Frovatriptan | Almotriptan |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pain-relief episodes at 2 h | 28 (36) | 32 (41) | NS |
| Pain-free episodes at 2 h | 15 (19) | 23 (29) | NS |
| Pain-relief episodes at 4 h | 41 (53) | 38 (50) | NS |
| Pain-free episodes at 4 h | 36 (47) | 42 (54) | NS |
| Pain-relief episodes at 24 h | 48 (62) | 53 (67) | NS |
| Pain-free episodes at 24 h | 46 (60) | 52 (67) | NS |
| Recurrent episodes at 24 h | 6 (8) | 16 (21) | <0.05 |
| Recurrent episodes at 48 h | 7 (9) | 19 (24) | <0.05 |
Data are reported as absolute (n) and relative (%) frequency. p refers to the statistical significance of the difference between the two study drugs
Fig. 1Cumulative hazard of recurrence over the 24 h during treatment with frovatriptan (continuous line) or almotriptan (dashed line) in the 67 women with menstrually related migraine included in this analysis. The p value refers to the statistical significance of the between-treatment difference
Fig. 2Changes in migraine intensity from baseline during treatment with frovatriptan (continuous line) or almotriptan (dashed line) in the 67 women with menstrually related migraine included in this analysis. The asterisks refer to the statistical significance of the between-treatment difference (*p < 0.05)