Literature DB >> 24108308

Comparative efficacy of triptans for the abortive treatment of migraine: a multiple treatment comparison meta-analysis.

Kristian Thorlund1, Edward J Mills, Ping Wu, Elodie Ramos, Anjan Chatterjee, Eric Druyts, Peter J Goadsby.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Migraine is the most common neurological condition in developed countries. The abortive treatment of migraine attacks is important both for quality of life and costs associated with illness. Triptans, serotonin 5-HT1B/1D receptor agonists, effectively relieve the pain, disability, and associated symptoms of migraine while improving health-related quality of life. Although a number of direct head-to-head triptan comparisons have been made, data for all possible permutations are not available, and unlikely to ever be so, although in clinical practice such information would be useful.
OBJECTIVE: We aimed to determine the relative efficacy of all available triptans to abort migraine headache among patients with previous adequate response to migraine treatments.
METHODS: We included only double-blinded randomized clinical trials comparing triptans to either placebo or another triptan. Our primary outcomes were pain-free response at two hours and 24-hour sustained pain-free response, and our secondary outcomes were headache response at two hours and 24-hour sustained headache response. We used Bayesian multiple treatment comparison meta-analyses of seven triptans used in adult patients to abort migraine attacks. We applied a random-effects analysis with meta-regression adjusting for dose. Results are reported as odds ratios with 95% credible intervals.
RESULTS: We included data from 74 randomized clinical trials. All triptans were significantly superior to placebo for all outcomes, with the exception of naratriptan for 24-hour sustained pain-free response. Eletriptan consistently yielded the highest treatment effect estimates. For the two-hour endpoints, eletriptan was statistically significantly superior to sumatriptan, almotriptan, naratriptan, and frovatriptan for at least one of the two outcomes. Rizatriptan yielded the second highest treatment effects followed by zolmitriptan. For the 24-hour endpoints, eletriptan was statistically significantly superior to sumatriptan, rizatriptan, almotriptan, and naratriptan for at least one of the two outcomes. Frovatriptan data were not available at that endpoint. Further, the probability that eletriptan is the most likely of all triptans to produce a favorable outcome was 68% for pain-free response at two hours, and 54% for 24-hour sustained pain-free response.
CONCLUSION: Triptans appear to offer differing treatment effects. In the populations studied eletriptan was most likely to produce pain-free responses that were sustained.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Migraine; headache; meta-analysis; multiple treatment comparison; pain-free response; sustained response; triptans

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24108308     DOI: 10.1177/0333102413508661

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cephalalgia        ISSN: 0333-1024            Impact factor:   6.292


  19 in total

Review 1.  Efficacy of triptans for the treatment of acute migraines: a quantitative comparison based on the dose-effect and time-course characteristics.

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Journal:  Eur J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2019-08-24       Impact factor: 2.953

Review 2.  Eletriptan in the management of acute migraine: an update on the evidence for efficacy, safety, and consistent response.

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Review 3.  Migraine Treatment: Current Acute Medications and Their Potential Mechanisms of Action.

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5.  The presenting and prescribing patterns of migraine in an Australian emergency department: A descriptive exploratory study.

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Review 6.  A Comprehensive Review of Over-the-counter Treatment for Chronic Migraine Headaches.

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7.  A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of breath powered nasal delivery of sumatriptan powder (AVP-825) in the treatment of acute migraine (The TARGET Study).

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Review 8.  Targeting TRP channels for novel migraine therapeutics.

Authors:  Gregory Dussor; J Yan; Jennifer Y Xie; Michael H Ossipov; David W Dodick; Frank Porreca
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Review 9.  A review of the pharmacoeconomics of eletriptan for the acute treatment of migraine.

Authors:  Rahul Bhambri; Jack Mardekian; Larry Z Liu; Edward Schweizer; Elodie Ramos
Journal:  Int J Gen Med       Date:  2015-01-12

10.  Treatment adherence among new triptan users: a 2-year cohort study in Taiwan.

Authors:  Ting-Bin Chen; Yung-Tai Chen; Jong-Ling Fuh; Chao-Hsiun Tang; Shuu-Jiun Wang
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2014-08-12       Impact factor: 7.277

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