| Literature DB >> 29263689 |
Maria Adele Giamberardino1, Giannapia Affaitati1, Francesco Cipollone2, Paolo Martelletti3, Raffaele Costantini4.
Abstract
Migraine is a highly disabling neurological condition, and preventative treatment still remains problematic, due to aspecificity of the majority of the currently available prophylactic drugs. Calcitonin-gene-related peptide (CGRP) plays a crucial role in migraine pathophysiology; agents aimed at blocking its activity have, therefore, been developed in recent years, among which are monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against CGRP, to prevent migraine. Erenumab is the only mAb that targets the CGRP receptor instead of the ligand, with high specificity and affinity of binding. This review will report on the most recent data on erenumab characteristics and on the results of clinical trials on its employment in the prevention of episodic migraine (4-14 monthly migraine days): one Phase II and two Phase III trials (completed) and one Phase III trial (ongoing). Monthly subcutaneous administration (70 mg or 140 mg) of erenumab vs placebo for 3-6 months showed significantly higher efficacy in reducing the mean monthly number of migraine days and the use of migraine-specific medication, and in decreasing physical impairment and impact of migraine on everyday activities (P<0.001). A favorable safety profile was demonstrated by the lack of significant differences in the occurrence of adverse events in erenumab-treated vs placebo-treated patients. Global results so far obtained point to erenumab as a new promising candidate for the preventative treatment of episodic migraine. Licence applications for erenumab were recently submitted to the Food and Drug Administration in the USA and European Medicines Agency in Europe (May/June 2017).Entities:
Keywords: CGRP; CGRP receptor; episodic migraine; erenumab
Year: 2017 PMID: 29263689 PMCID: PMC5727105 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S128143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 3.133
Erenumab in episodic migraine: Phase II and Phase III studies
| Protocol and date of completion | Population active vs placebo | Modality of administration | Primary efficacy outcome | Adverse events (AEs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01952574 | 483 | 7, 21, 70 mg sc once/month for 12 weeks | Week 9–12 vs basis decrease in migraine days; 70 mg vs placebo ( | Fatigue, nasopharyngitis, headache, vertigo |
| NCT02483585 – ARISE | 577 | 70 mg sc for 12 weeks | Weeks 9–12 vs basis decrease in migraine days and migraine medications; 70 mg vs placebo (0.001< | Upper respiratory tract infection, injection site pain, nausea, nasopharyngitis |
| NCT02456740 – STRIVE | 955 | 70, 140 mg sc once/month for 24 weeks | 24 weeks vs basis: decrease in number of monthly migraine days, migraine medications, MPFID-EA, and MPFID-PI; 70 mg and 140mg vs placebo ( | Upper respiratory tract infection, injection site pain, nausea, nasopharyngitis |
| NCT03096834 | 382 | Single dose sc once/month for 12 weeks | Reduction in migraine days and improvement in patients’ quality of life | N/A |
Abbreviations: MPFID-EA, impact of migraine on everyday activities as evaluated via the Migraine Physical Function Impact Diary; MPFID-PI, mean physical impairment domain score as measured by the Migraine Physical Function Impact Diary; N/A, not applicable sc, subcutaneous.