Literature DB >> 31241488

Individualization of Migraine Prevention: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Psychophysical-based Prediction of Duloxetine Efficacy.

Lee B Kisler1, Irit Weissman-Fogel2, Robert C Coghill3, Elliot Sprecher4, David Yarnitsky1,4, Yelena Granovsky1,4.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Finding an effective preventive agent for the individual migraineur is often long and frustrating. An individual-specific, efficacy-predicting tool would be invaluable in directing, shortening, and improving this process. As the serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor duloxetine is a pain modulator, we hypothesized that pronociceptivity will directly predict drug efficacy, so that the more pronociceptive the patient is, the more efficacious the drug. Therefore, we used psychophysical pain measures to predict duloxetine efficacy in migraine prevention.
METHODS: Fifty-five migraineurs participated: 27 received duloxetine and 28 nonactive placebo. Responses to painful stimuli, conditioned pain modulation, and temporal summation of pain were measured before treatment. Treatment outcome measures included changes in attack frequency, migraine days, pain levels, and a reported self-estimate of migraine improvement at weeks 4 and 5. To examine treatment effects, the outcome measures were compared with pretreatment levels. Treatment by the psychophysical-predictor effect on treatment outcome was examined in separate regression models.
RESULTS: Duloxetine was more efficacious than placebo in migraine prevention, as indicated by the patient's estimation of migraine improvement (duloxetine: 52.3±30.4%; placebo: 26.0±27.3%; P=0.001). Further, this measure, in the duloxetine group, was predicted by higher pretreatment pain ratings for tonic heat pain (P=0.012); greater pain sensitivity at baseline predicted greater percent of migraine improvement in duloxetine (r=0.47; P=0.013), but not in placebo (r=-0.36; P=0.060). DISCUSSION: Our results suggest how personalized medicine can be applied to designing appropriate migraine prevention treatment. Psychophysical testing can reveal and characterize pronociceptive migraineurs, who seem to be more likely than non-pronociceptive ones to benefit from migraine prevention with serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31241488     DOI: 10.1097/AJP.0000000000000739

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin J Pain        ISSN: 0749-8047            Impact factor:   3.442


  7 in total

1.  Neuroendocrine Stress Axis-Dependence of Duloxetine Analgesia (Anti-Hyperalgesia) in Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy.

Authors:  Larissa Staurengo-Ferrari; Ivan J M Bonet; Dioneia Araldi; Paul G Green; Jon D Levine
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2021-12-08       Impact factor: 6.709

2.  Development and Validation of a Predictive Model of Pain Modulation Profile to Guide Chronic Pain Treatment: A Study Protocol.

Authors:  Matthieu Vincenot; Alexia Coulombe-Lévêque; Monica Sean; Félix Camirand Lemyre; Louis Gendron; Serge Marchand; Guillaume Léonard
Journal:  Front Pain Res (Lausanne)       Date:  2021-02-15

3.  Comparison of Thermal and Electrical Modalities in the Assessment of Temporal Summation of Pain and Conditioned Pain Modulation.

Authors:  Monica Sean; Alexia Coulombe-Lévêque; Martine Bordeleau; Matthieu Vincenot; Louis Gendron; Serge Marchand; Guillaume Léonard
Journal:  Front Pain Res (Lausanne)       Date:  2021-09-27

4.  Response Predictors of Repetitive Neuromuscular Magnetic Stimulation in the Preventive Treatment of Episodic Migraine.

Authors:  Corinna Börner; Tabea Renner; Florian Trepte-Freisleder; Giada Urban; Paul Schandelmaier; Magdalena Lang; Matthias F Lechner; Helene Koenig; Birgit Klose; Lucia Albers; Sandro M Krieg; Thomas Baum; Florian Heinen; Mirjam N Landgraf; Nico Sollmann; Michaela V Bonfert
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2022-07-28       Impact factor: 4.086

5.  The effect of duloxetine on mechanistic pain profiles, cognitive factors and clinical pain in patients with painful knee osteoarthritis-A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study.

Authors:  Kristian Kjaer-Staal Petersen; Asbjørn Mohr Drewes; Anne Estrup Olesen; Nadia Ammitzbøll; Davide Bertoli; Christina Brock; Lars Arendt-Nielsen
Journal:  Eur J Pain       Date:  2022-06-13       Impact factor: 3.651

6.  Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS): towards the development of a clinic-friendly method for the evaluation of excitatory and inhibitory pain mechanisms.

Authors:  Monica Sean; Alexia Coulombe-Lévêque; Matthieu Vincenot; Marylie Martel; Louis Gendron; Serge Marchand; Guillaume Léonard
Journal:  Can J Pain       Date:  2021-03-23

7.  Conditioned pain modulation is more efficient in patients with painful diabetic polyneuropathy than those with nonpainful diabetic polyneuropathy.

Authors:  Yelena Granovsky; Leah Shafran Topaz; Helen Laycock; Rabab Zubiedat; Shoshana Crystal; Chen Buxbaum; Noam Bosak; Rafi Hadad; Erel Domany; Mogher Khamaisi; Elliot Sprecher; David L Bennett; Andrew Rice; David Yarnitsky
Journal:  Pain       Date:  2022-05-01       Impact factor: 6.961

  7 in total

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