| Literature DB >> 32318014 |
Michael J Marmura1, Tamar Lin2, Dagan Harris2, Alon Ironi2, Noah L Rosen3.
Abstract
Background: A recent randomized controlled study showed that 66.7% (66/99) and 37.4% (37/99) of people undergoing remote electrical neuromodulation (REN), a novel non-pharmacological migraine treatment, achieve pain relief and pain freedom, respectively, at 2 h post-treatment. The participants who completed the 6-weeks double-blind phase of this study were offered to participate in an open-label extension (OLE) with an active REN device. Objective: This study investigated the clinical use of REN, focusing on its potential in reducing the use of acute migraine medications.Entities:
Keywords: acute treatment; conditioned pain modulation; medication overuse headache; migraine; neuromodulation; remote electrical neuromodulation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32318014 PMCID: PMC7154105 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Enrollment of participants.
Demographic and clinical characteristics.
| Age, years (SD) | 44 (12.51) |
| Female, % ( | 78.1 (125/160) |
| Caucasian, % ( | 87.5 (140/160) |
| Triptan users, % ( | 45.62 (73/160) |
| Preventive medication use, % ( | 32.5 (52/160) |
| Often | 32.5 (52/160) |
| Rarely | 20.6 (33/160) |
| None | 46.9 (75/160) |
| None | 1.9 (3/160) |
| Nausea | 28.7 (46/160) |
| Photophobia | 49.4 (79/160) |
| Phonophobia | 18.1 (29/160) |
Two participants reported allodynia as most bothersome symptom (data not shown).
Figure 2Number of attacks treated with different types of acute pharmacological treatments in the run-in phase. A total of 22 of the 404 attacks were excluded from this analysis since the medication type was not specified (participants reported “other” in medication type). AAC, aspirin, acetaminophen, and caffeine; APAP, acetaminophen.
Figure 3Comparison of medication use patterns. The percentage of participants who treated their attacks only with REN and avoided medications in all their reported attacks in the open-label extension phase (black) compared with the run-in phase (gray). *p < 0.0001.
Figure 4Comparison of clinical pain outcomes. (A) The percentage of participants achieving pain relief at 2 h post-treatment in a least 50% of their treatments in the open-label extension phase (black) compared with the run-in phase (gray). (B) The percentage of participants achieving pain freedom at 2 h post-treatment in a least 50% of their treatments in the open-label extension phase (black) compared with the run-in phase (gray).
Incidence of adverse events and device-related adverse events.
| Patients reporting at least one adverse event, % ( | 7.9 (11/139) |
| Device-related adverse events, % ( | 2.9 (4/139) |
| Pain in the arm/hand, % ( | 1.4 (2/139) |
| Muscle spasms, % ( | 0.7 (1/139) |
| Neck and shoulder pain, % ( | 0.7 (1/139) |