| Literature DB >> 31666008 |
Raffaele Ornello1, Cindy Tiseo1, Ilaria Frattale1, Giulia Perrotta1, Carmine Marini2, Francesca Pistoia1, Simona Sacco3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Erenumab, a fully human monoclonal antibody directed against the calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor, was approved for the prevention of episodic (EM) or chronic migraine (CM) at the monthly dose of 70 mg or 140 mg. We reviewed the available literature to understand if patients with prior preventive treatment failures benefit more from the 140 mg dose than the 70 mg. MAIN BODY: We searched papers indexed in PubMed and conference abstracts published in the last 2 years which assessed the safety and efficacy of erenumab in patients with prior preventive treatment failures. We reviewed the results of 3 randomized controlled trials and their subgroup analyses and open-label extensions. The 140 mg monthly dose of erenumab had a numerical advantage over the 70 mg monthly dose in patients with prior preventive treatment failures, both in EM and CM (with or without medication overuse) during the double blind phases of the trials and their open-label extensions. The numerical difference between the two doses increased with the increase in the number of prior preventive treatment failures.Entities:
Keywords: Calcitonin gene-related peptide; Erenumab; Migraine; Migraine prevention; Monoclonal antibodies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31666008 PMCID: PMC6822439 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-019-1054-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Characteristics of the randomized controlled trials assessing the effect of prior preventive treatment failures on the treatment with erenumab for migraine prevention
| NCT02066415 | STRIVE | LIBERTY | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase | II | III | IIIb |
| Migraine type | CM | EM | EM |
| Dose (mg) | 70/140 | 70/140 | 140 |
| OLE duration (weeks) | 52 | 52 | 24 |
| Duration of blind phase (weeks) | 12 | 24 | 12 |
| Prior preventive treatment failuresa accepted | ≤3 | ≤2 | 2–4 |
| No. of patients | |||
| Placebo | 286 | 319 | 125 |
| 70 mg | 191 | 317 | – |
| 140 mg | 190 | 319 | 121 |
| Patients with prior preventive treatment failure(s) (%) | |||
| Placebo | 70 | 40 | 100 |
| 70 mg | 67 | 40 | – |
| 140 mg | 66 | 36 | 100 |
MMD Monthly Migraine Days, OLE Open-Label Extension, EM Episodic Migraine, CM Chronic Migraine
adue to lack of response; partial response or suspension due to tolerability were accepted
Fig. 1Patients with episodic migraine: effect of erenumab on monthly migraine days, monthly migraine-specific medication days, and 50% reduction in monthly migraine days from baseline according to prior preventive treatment failures in the STRIVE trial [15] and its open-label extension [16]
Fig. 2Patients with chronic migraine: effect of erenumab on monthly migraine days, monthly migraine-specific medication days, and 50% reduction in monthly migraine days from baseline according to prior preventive treatment failures in the NCT02066415 trial [10] and its open-label extension [11]
Fig. 3Patients with chronic migraine and medication overuse: effect of erenumab on monthly migraine days, monthly migraine-specific medication days, and 50% reduction in monthly migraine days from baseline according to prior preventive treatment failures in the NCT02066415 trial [12, 13]