| Literature DB >> 28766236 |
Manjit Matharu1, Rashmi Halker2, Patricia Pozo-Rosich3,4, Ronald DeGryse5, Aubrey Manack Adams5, Sheena K Aurora6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: OnabotulinumtoxinA has been shown to reduce headache-days among patients with chronic migraine (CM). The objective of this analysis was to determine whether onabotulinumtoxinA has an impact on headache-day severity in patients with CM among those patients who were deemed non-responders based on reduction in the frequency of headache days alone.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic migraine; Headache severity; Hit-6; OnabotulinumtoxinA; PREEMPT
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28766236 PMCID: PMC5539058 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-017-0784-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics for overall PREEMPT group and the non-responder subgroupa
| Characteristic | Overall PREEMPT Group | Non-Responder Subgroup | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O/O ( | P/O ( |
| O/O ( | P/O ( |
| |
| Mean (SD) age, y | 41.1 (10.4) | 41.5 (10.7) | 0.58 | 42.3 (10.4) | 42.8 (10.5) | 0.56 |
| Age ≥ 40 y, n (%) | 395 (57.4) | 408 (58.6) | 0.65 | 179 (62.8) | 224 (62.2.) | 0.94 |
| Sex, n (%) | ||||||
| Female | 603 (87.6) | 593 (85.2) | 0.19 | 242 (84.9) | 309 (85.8) | 0.74 |
| Race/Ethnicity, n (%) | 0.60 | 0.40 | ||||
| White | 617 (89.7) | 630 (90.5) | 257 (90.2) | 333 (92.5) | ||
| Black | 34 (4.9) | 40 (5.7) | 15 (5.3) | 17 (4.7) | ||
| Hispanic | 27 (3.9) | 19 (2.7) | 9 (3.2) | 9 (2.5) | ||
| Other | 10 (1.5) | 7 (1.0) | 4 (1.4) | 1 (0.3) | ||
| Mean (SD) age of onset of CM, y | 21.2 (11.0) | 21.9 (11.9) | 0.46 | 21.3 (11.4) | 22.5 (12.1) | 0.19 |
| Mean (SD) CM duration, y | 19.4 (12.4) | 19.0 (12.7) | 0.49 | 20.4 (12.2) | 19.7 (12.8) | 0.46 |
| Mean (SD) headache days (≥4 h) per 28-day period | 19.9 (3.7) | 19.8 (3.7) | 0.52 | 20.5 (3.9) | 20.4 (4.0) | 0.61 |
| Prestudy headache prophylactic use, n (%) | 425 (61.8) | 454 (65.2) | 0.18 | 197 (69.1) | 263 (73.1) | 0.29 |
| Acute headache medicine overuse, n (%) | 446 (64.8) | 460 (66.1) | 0.62 | 195 (68.4) | 251 (69.7) | 0.73 |
| Mean (SD) HIT-6 scorec | 65.5 (4.1) | 65.4 (4.3) | 0.64 | 65.4 (3.8) | 65.3 (4.4) | 0.84 |
| Patients with severe headache impact | ||||||
| (HIT-6 total score ≥ 60), %c | 93.5 | 92.7 | 0.57 | 93.7 | 92.8 | 0.75 |
| Mean (SD) MSQ scored | ||||||
| Role restrictive | 38.5 (16.6) | 38.7 (17.3) | 0.97 | 37.9 (16.7) | 38.4 (17.5) | 0.67 |
| Role preventive | 56.0 (21.2) | 56.1 (21.7) | 0.83 | 57.0 (21.9) | 56.1 (21.7) | 0.62 |
| Emotional functioning | 42.1 (24.1) | 42.4 (25.0) | 0.81 | 42.7 (23.6) | 44.6 (24.7) | 0.31 |
CM chronic migraine, HIT-6 6-item Headache Impact Test, MSQ Migraine-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire, O/O onabotulinumtoxinA in double-blind phase and open-label phase, P/O placebo in double-blind phase and onabotulinumtoxinA in open-label phase, PREEMPT Phase 3 REsearch Evaluating Migraine Prophylaxis Therapy
aNonresponder group = <50% reduction in headache-day frequency at week 24
b P-values are the pairwise t-test or the Fisher’s exact test between the O/O vs the P/O groups for each respective population group
cHIT-6 scores of 36–49 indicate little or no impact; 50–55, some impact; 56–59, substantial impact; 60–78, severe impact
dMSQ v2.1 scores range from 0 (poor) to 100 (good)
Fig. 1Patient Disposition. Reproduced with permission from Aurora, et al. Headache 2011;51:1358–73
Fig. 2Change from baseline in the number of severe headache days per 28-day period, among nonresponders.*P ≤ 0.001. † P < 0.05
Fig. 3.Pooled number of severe headache days, among nonresponders. *P ≤ 0.001. † P < 0.05
Severity and HIT-6 Responder Analysis
|
| |||
| OnabotulinumtoxinA/ OnabotulinumtoxinA | Placebo / OnabotulinumtoxinA |
| |
| Week 24 | 41.1% | 31.4% | 0.011 |
| Week 56 | 64.6% | 65.6% | 0.792 |
|
| |||
| OnabotulinumtoxinA/ OnabotulinumtoxinA | Placebo / OnabotulinumtoxinA |
| |
| Week 24 | 62.2% | 43.5% | <0.001 |
| Week 56 | 74.4% | 72.0% | 0.601 |
HIT-6 6-item Headache Impact Test
aPatients with severity response (≥1-grade improvement from baseline in severity), among patients with <50% reduction from baseline in headache-day frequency at week 24
bPatients with a HIT-6 response (≥5-point improvement from baseline), among patients with ≥1-grade reduction from baseline in headache-day severity at week 24