| Literature DB >> 26055242 |
Ria Bhola1, Evelyn Kinsella, Nicola Giffin, Sue Lipscombe, Fayyaz Ahmed, Mark Weatherall, Peter J Goadsby.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Single pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (sTMS) is a novel treatment for acute migraine. Previous randomised controlled data demonstrated that sTMS is effective and well tolerated in the treatment of migraine with aura. The aim of the programme reported here was to evaluate patient responses in the setting of routine clinical practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26055242 PMCID: PMC4463955 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-015-0535-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Initiation strategy from Medical Advisory Board
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| Initiate treatment as early as possible when patient first experiences symptoms of migraine, including pain and/or aura symptoms. |
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| Fill-out the headache diary immediately after treatment or at any time after the migraine attack subsides. |
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| Record all symptoms, triggers and medications used during each attack in a diary |
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| Increase the number of pulses delivered during an attack using the following systematic method as needed to improve pain and symptom relief. |
| To Begin: | |
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| Encourage the patient to deliver 2 sequential pulses as early as possible at the beginning of the migraine attack. |
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| Continue with 2 pulses every 15 min for 1–2 h or until pain and symptoms resolve. |
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| Encourage patients to withhold using rescue medication for the first hour or two if possible. |
| Evaluate after the first month (3–4 attacks) - if needed increase the number of pulses delivered | |
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| Encourage the patient to deliver 3 sequential pulses as early as possible at the beginning of the migraine attack. |
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| Continue with 3 pulses every 15 min for 1–2 h or until pain and symptoms resolve. |
| Evaluate again after the second month (3–4 attacks) | |
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| Encourage the patient to deliver 4 sequential pulses as early as possible at the beginning of the migraine attack. |
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| Continue with 4 pulses every 15 min for 1–2 h or until pain and symptoms resolve. |
Fig. 1Position of device for treatment
Fig. 2Patient disposition. *New patient- survey provided and no data at the time of the evaluation. **Data set for primary analysis
Patient characteristics
| Migraine features | # of patients | # of attacks treated |
|---|---|---|
| Migraine with aura | 83 | 3802 |
| Migraine without aura | 107 | 5913 |
| Of these: | ||
| Episodic | 59 | 3470 |
| Chronic | 131 | 6245 |
Migraines per month, pain severity and duration of attack by number of patients in each grouping over the reporting period
| Migraine days/month | Baseline | 6 weeks | 12 weeks |
|---|---|---|---|
| <5 | 8 | 11 | 27 |
| 5–9 | 19 | 35 | 33 |
| 10–14 | 35 | 42 | 45 |
| 15–20 | 56 | 36 | 32 |
| 21–25 | 14 | 12 | 9 |
| 26–30 | 58 | 52 | 44 |
| Pain severitya | Baseline | 6 weeks | 12 weeks |
| 0 | 0 | 3 | 2 |
| 1–3 | 0 | 44 | 63 |
| 4–6 | 32 | 85 | 75 |
| 7–9 | 140 | 54 | 47 |
| 10 | 18 | 4 | 3 |
| Duration in days | Baseline | 6 weeks | 12 weeks |
| <1 | 34 | 66 | 84 |
| 1 | 55 | 55 | 48 |
| 2 | 34 | 30 | 27 |
| 3 | 41 | 24 | 20 |
| 4 | 19 | 7 | 3 |
| >4 | 2 | 2 | 3 |
aPain severity – 0 to 10 scale
Fig. 3Change in attack duration plotted by patient. While 102 patients had a reduction, 75 had no change and eight had an increase. Five patients did not report the data
Patients treating during pregnancy
| Patient 1 | Patient 2 | Patient 3 |
|---|---|---|
| Age: 29. Episodic Migraine with Aura. | Age: 30. Chronic Migraine without aura. | Age: 32. Chronic Migraine without aura. |
| Pre-pregnancy migraine pattern: | Pre-pregnancy migraine pattern: | Pre-pregnancy migraine pattern: |
| Frequency: 12 days/month. Duration: 0.5–1 day. | Frequency: 10 days/month plus daily background pain. | Frequency: 15 days/month. Duration: 1–2 days. |
| Treatment: Triptan and sleep. | No effective treatment. | Treatment: frovatriptan, Syndol (paracetamol [acetaminopheno] + codeine + doxylamine + caffeine) and Naproxen, goes to bed. |
| During pregnancy: | During pregnancy: | During pregnancy: |
| Frequency: 2–4 days per week, Duration of 2–3 days, severe and in bed. Estimated 90 % reduced ability to function. | 16 days: acute attacks plus daily background pain. Duration: 1 day. Estimated 50 % reduced ability to function. | Treatment: Dihydocodeine during the early pregnancy with partial benefit. Estimated 60 % reduced ability to function. |
| TMS response: 2 consecutive pulses repeated after 15 min. Consistent reduced pain severity and duration. Could return to function and did not need to go to bed. | TMS response: 4 pulses per day (2 consecutive pulses repeated after 15 min). Stopped attack escalation and reduced the severity back down to a mild tolerable level within 1–2 h. Associated symptoms resolved or did not develop. | TMS response: a single pulse repeated after 15–30 min; up to 4 pulses per attack. Initially combined with dihydrocodeine. Subsequently used sTMS only and could abort the attack within an hour. Associated symptoms rarely developed. |