| Literature DB >> 24904224 |
Abstract
The objective of this review is to provide an overview of menstrual migraine (MM) and of frovatriptan and to assess clinical trial data regarding the efficacy and safety of frovatriptan for the acute and short-term prophylaxis of MM. Randomized controlled trials comparing frovatriptan with placebo or a triptan comparator for the acute or prophylactic treatment of MM were selected for review. MM affects up to 60% of women with migraine. Compared with attacks at other times of the cycle, menstrual attacks are longer, more severe, less responsive to treatment, more likely to relapse, and more disabling than attacks at other times of the cycle. No drugs are licensed for acute treatment of MM; triptans are recommended for treatment of moderate to severe attacks for menstrual and nonmenstrual attacks. Perimenstrual prophylaxis is indicated for patients with predictable MM that does not respond to symptomatic treatment alone. Treatment is unlicensed, but options include triptans, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and hormone manipulation. Frovatriptan is distinctive from other triptans due to its long elimination half-life of 26 hours, which confers a longer duration of action. Post hoc analyses from randomized trials of MM show similar pain relief and pain-free rates for frovatriptan compared with other triptans (2 hours pain-free: relative risk [RR] 1.27, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.91-1.76) but significantly lower relapse rates (24 hours sustained pain-free: RR 0.34, 95% CI 0.18-0.62). Data from randomized controlled trials show a significant reduction in risk of MM in women using frovatriptan 2.5 mg once daily (RR 1.56, 95% CI 1.31-1.86) or twice daily (RR 1.98, 95% CI 1.68-2.34) for perimenstrual prophylaxis compared with placebo. The twice daily dosing was more effective than once daily (RR 1.27, 95% CI 1.11-1.46). These findings support the use of frovatriptan as a first-line acute treatment for MM and for perimenstrual prophylaxis.Entities:
Keywords: acute treatment; menstrually related migraine; prophylaxis
Year: 2014 PMID: 24904224 PMCID: PMC4039425 DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S63444
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
International Headache Society classification of menstrual migraine
| Diagnostic criteria | |
| A. | Attacks, in a menstruating woman, fulfilling criteria for migraine without aura and criterion (B) below |
| B. | Documented and prospectively recorded evidence over at least three consecutive cycles has confirmed that attacks occur exclusively on day 1±2 (ie, days −2 to +3) of menstruation in at least two out of three menstrual cycles and at no other times of the cycle |
| Diagnostic criteria | |
| A. | Attacks, in a menstruating woman, fulfilling criteria for migraine without aura and criterion B below |
| B. | Documented and prospectively recorded evidence over at least three consecutive cycles has confirmed that attacks occur on day 1±2 (ie, days −2 to +3) of menstruation in at least two out of three menstrual cycles and additionally, at other times of the cycle |
Notes: For the purposes of ICHD-3 beta, menstruation is considered to be endometrial bleeding resulting from either the normal menstrual cycle or from the withdrawal of exogenous progestogens, as in the use of combined oral contraceptives or cyclical hormone replacement therapy. The first day of menstruation is day 1, and the preceding day is day −1; there is no day 0.
Abbreviation: ICHD, International Headache Society Classification of Headache Disorders.
Figure 1Headache recurrence vs half-life for different triptans, after 2 hours.
Notes: Copyright © 2003, John Wiley and Sons. Reproduced with permission from Géraud G, Keywood C, Senard JM. Migraine headache recurrence: relationship to clinical, pharmacological, and pharmacokinetic properties of triptans. Headache. 2003;43(4):376–388;52 †after 4 hours.
Clinical trials of frovatriptan for acute treatment of menstrual migraine: post hoc analyses of three placebo-controlled RCTs
| Study | Intervention | Results of primary end points |
|---|---|---|
| Allais et al (2011) | Frovatriptan 2.5 mg (73 attacks); zolmitriptan 2.5 mg (65 attacks) | Pain relief at 2 hours: 52% frovatriptan; 53% zolmitriptan (NS) |
| Pain-free at 2 hours: 22% frovatriptan; 26% zolmitriptan (NS) | ||
| Pain relief at 24 hours: 83% frovatriptan; 82% zolmitriptan (NS) | ||
| Pain-free at 24 hours: 74% frovatriptan; 69% zolmitriptan (NS) | ||
| Relapse within 24 hours: 15% frovatriptan; 22% zolmitriptan ( | ||
| Bartolini et al (2012) | Frovatriptan 2.5 mg (77 attacks); almotriptan 12.5 mg (78 attacks) | Pain relief at 2 hours: 36% frovatriptan; 41% almotriptan (NS) |
| Pain-free at 2 hours: 19% frovatriptan; 29% almotriptan (NS) | ||
| Pain relief at 24 hours: 62% frovatriptan; 67% almotriptan (NS) | ||
| Pain-free at 24 hours: 60% frovatriptan; 67% almotriptan (NS) | ||
| Relapse within 24 hours: 8% frovatriptan; 21% almotriptan ( | ||
| Savi et al (2011) | Frovatriptan 2.5 mg (49 attacks); rizatriptan 5 mg (59 attacks) | Pain relief at 2 hours: 58% frovatriptan; 64% rizatriptan (NS) |
| Pain-free at 2 hours: 31% frovatriptan; 34% rizatriptan (NS) | ||
| Pain relief at 24 hours: 81% frovatriptan; 74% rizatriptan (NS) | ||
| Pain-free at 24 hours: 67% frovatriptan; 61% rizatriptan (NS) | ||
| Relapse within 24 hours: 10% frovatriptan; 32% rizatriptan ( | ||
| Allais et al (2012) | Pooled data from Frovatriptan 2.5 mg (199 attacks); almotriptan 12.5 mg/rizatriptan 5 mg/zolmitriptan 2.5 mg (202 attacks) | Pain relief at 2 hours: 37% frovatriptan; 43% other triptans (NS) |
| Pain-free at 2 hours: 23% frovatriptan; 30% other triptans (NS) | ||
| Pain relief at 24 hours: 37% frovatriptan; 43% other triptans (NS) | ||
| Pain-free at 24 hours: 23% frovatriptan; 30% other triptans (NS) | ||
| Relapse within 24 hours: 11% frovatriptan; 24% other triptans ( | ||
| Allais et al (2013) | Oral contraceptive-induced migraine in pooled data from frovatriptan 2.5 mg (73 attacks); almotriptan 12.5 mg/rizatriptan 5 mg/zolmitriptan 2.5 mg (71 attacks) | Pain relief at 2 hours: 51% frovatriptan; 48% other triptans (NS) |
| Pain-free at 2 hours: 25% frovatriptan; 28% other triptans (NS) | ||
| Pain relief at 24 hours: 83% frovatriptan; 76% other triptans (NS) | ||
| Pain-free at 24 hours: 71% frovatriptan; 60% other triptans ( | ||
| Relapse within 24 hours: 17% frovatriptan; 27% other triptans ( |
Notes: Pain relief: decrease in migraine from severe or moderate to mild or no headache. Pain-free: absence of migraine 2 hours after intake of one dose of study drug ± rescue medication. Relapse: migraine occurring 24 hours after the previous episode, with a migraine-free period between the two attacks.
Abbreviations: NS, nonsignificant; RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Figure 2Pain relief following treatment with frovatriptan versus almotriptan, rizatriptan, or zolmitriptan.
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; M-H, Mantel-Haenszel.
Figure 3Pain-free response following treatment with frovatriptan versus almotriptan, rizatriptan, or zolmitriptan.
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; M-H, Mantel-Haenszel.
Figure 4Relapse following 2-hour pain-free response after treatment with frovatriptan versus almotriptan, rizatriptan, or zolmitriptan.
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; M-H, Mantel-Haenszel.
Clinical trials of frovatriptan for perimenstrual prophylaxis
| Study | Intervention | Diagnosis established | Baseline number of attacks | Primary endpoint | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silberstein et al 2004 | Crossover treatment of three PMPs; start 2 days before predicted MM; duration 6 days | Review of patient’s history: >1 year history of MM; attack frequency of ≥3 out of 4 PMPs in the previous year MM defined as migraine on days −2 to +4 | Mean MM frequency in previous 12 months =1.4 (range 7 to 12) | Incidence of MM during each treated PMP | Frovatriptan QD 52%; frovatriptan BID 41%; PCB 67% ( | Diagnosis was derived from women’s responses to study screening questions, without the use of confirmation headache diaries 36.4% treated 2 days before anticipated MM; 69.3% treated 1–3 days before anticipated MM |
| Brandes et al 2009 | Parallel treatment of three PMPs; start 2 days before predicted MM; duration 6 days | Patients with difficult to treat MM and a documented history of MM in at least 2 of the three previous cycles MM defined as migraine that started on day −2 to +3 of menstruation | Mean MM frequency in previous three cycles =2.9 (SD 0.4) | Mean number of headache-free PMPs per patient | Frovatriptan QD 0.69; frovatriptan BID 0.92; PCB 0.42 ( | 34% treated within one day of correct timing for all three PMPs Accurate predication associated with greater efficacy; number of MM-free PMPs improved by 213% [BID] and 100% [QD] vs PCB |
| Silberstein et al 2009 | Crossover treatment of three PMPs; start 2 days before predicted MM; duration 6 days | Review of patient’s history: >1-year history of MM; attack frequency of ≥ three out of four PMPs in the previous year MM defined as migraine on days −2 to +4 | Mean MM frequency in previous 12 months =11.5 (median 12.0) | Incidence of MM during each treated PMP | Frovatriptan QD 51.3%; frovatriptan BID 37.7%; PCB 67.1% ( | Diagnosis was derived from women’s responses to study screening questions, without the use of confirmation headache diaries |
Abbreviations: BID, twice daily; ITT, intention to treat; MM, menstrual migraine (pure menstrual or menstrually-related migraine); PCB, placebo; PMP, perimenstrual period; QD, once daily; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SD, standard deviation; vs, versus.
Figure 5Perimenstrual prophylaxis with frovatriptan: incidence of no migraine occurring during the treated perimenstrual period.
Abbreviations: BID, twice daily; CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; QD, once daily; M-H, Mantel-Haenszel; vs, versus.