| Literature DB >> 32799790 |
Raffaele Ornello1, Alfonsina Casalena2, Ilaria Frattale1, Valeria Caponnetto1, Amleto Gabriele3, Giannapia Affaitati4, Maria Adele Giamberardino4, Maurizio Assetta2, Maurizio Maddestra5, Fabio Marzoli5, Stefano Viola6, Davide Cerone7, Carmine Marini8, Francesca Pistoia1,7, Simona Sacco9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most patients treated with erenumab in clinical practice have chronic migraine (CM). We assessed the rate and possible predictors of conversion from CM to episodic migraine (EM) in a real-life study. MAIN BODY: We performed a subgroup analysis of patients treated with erenumab from January 2019 to February 2020 in the Abruzzo region, central Italy. Treatment was provided according to current clinical practice. For the purpose of the present study, we included patients fulfilling the definition of CM for the three months preceding erenumab treatment and with at least 6 months of follow-up after treatment. We assessed the rate of conversion to EM from baseline to Months 4-6 of treatment and during each month of treatment. To test the clinical validity of conversion to EM, we also assessed the decrease in monthly headache days (MHDs), acute medication days, and median headache intensity on a Numerical Rating Scale (NRS). We included in our study 91 patients with CM. At Months 4-6, 62 patients (68.1%) converted from CM to EM; the proportion of converters increased from Month 1 to Month 5. In the overall group of patients, median MHDs decreased from 26.5 (IQR 20-30) to 7.5 (IQR 5-16; P < 0.001) compared with baseline, while median acute medication days decreased from 21 (IQR 16-30) to 6 (IQR 3-10; P < 0.001) and median NRS scores decreased from 8 (IQR 7-9) to 6 (IQR 4-7; P < 0.001). Significant decreases were found both in converters and in non-converters. We found no significant predictors of conversion to EM among the patients' baseline characteristics.Entities:
Keywords: Calcitonin gene-related peptide; Chronic migraine; Erenumab; Migraine prevention; Monoclonal antibodies; Real-life study
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32799790 PMCID: PMC7429460 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-020-01171-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Characteristics of the study patients
| Characteristics (total patients = 91) | |
|---|---|
| Female, | 80 (87.9) |
| Age, median (IQR) | 49 (39–54) |
| Years of migraine history, median (IQR) | 28.5 (20–34) |
| Years of CM history, median (IQR) | 10 (4–19) |
| Baseline MHDs, median (IQR) | 26.5 (20–30) |
| Baseline acute medication days, median (IQR) | 21 (16–30) |
| Baseline NRS, median (IQR) | 8 (7–9) |
| Aura, | 28 (30.8) |
| Allodynia, | 35 (38.5) |
| Medication overuse, | 71 (78.0) |
| Previous preventive treatment failures, | |
| 2 | 31 (43.1) |
| 3 | 24 (26.4) |
| 4 | 28 (30.8) |
| > 4 | 8 (8.8) |
| Botulinum toxin failure, | 39 (42.9) |
| Concurrent oral preventive treatments at baseline, | 30 (33.0) |
| Obesity, | 13 (14.3) |
| Sleep disturbances, | 33 (36.3) |
| Depressive symptoms, | 19 (20.9) |
CM indicates chronic migraine, IQR interquartile range, MHD monthly headache days, NRS Numerical Rating Scale
Fig. 1Rates of conversion to episodic migraine at Months 4–6 and after each month of treatment according to monthly headache days. HFEM indicates high-frequency episodic migraine (8–14 monthly headache days); LFEM, low-frequency episodic migraine (0–3 monthly headache days); MFEM, medium-frequency episodic migraine (4–7 monthly headache days)
Fig. 2Decrease in median headache days a, acute medication days b, and headache intensity on a Numerical Rating Scale c according to converter status in the present study
Baseline characteristics of converters versus non-converters to episodic migraine during the treatment
| Characteristic | Converters ( | Non-converters ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Female, | 54 (87.1) | 26 (89.7) | 0.727 |
| Age, median (IQR) | 47 (38–51) | 53 (42–57) | 0.060 |
| Years of migraine history, median (IQR) | 28 (20–33) | 29 (20–37) | 0.435 |
| Years of CM history, median (IQR) | 8 (5–12) | 15 (4–22) | 0.099 |
| MHDs, median (IQR) | 25 (20–30) | 30 (20–30) | 0.360 |
| Acute medication days, median (IQR) | 20 (16–27) | 27.5 (20–30) | 0.063 |
| Baseline NRS, median (IQR) | 8 (6–9) | 8 (8–8) | 0.349 |
| Aura, | 18 (29.0) | 10 (34.4) | 0.600 |
| Allodynia, | 24 (38.7) | 11 (37.9) | 0.943 |
| Medication overuse, | 46 (74.2) | 25 (86.2) | 0.197 |
| Prior preventive treatment failures, | 0.954 | ||
| 2 | 21 (33.9) | 10 (34.5) | |
| > 2 | 41 (66.1) | 19 (65.5) | |
| Botulinum toxin failure, | 26 (41.9) | 13 (44.8) | 0.795 |
| Obesity, | 9 (14.5) | 4 (13.8) | 0.999 |
| Sleep disturbances, | 19 (30.6) | 14 (48.3) | 0.103 |
| Depressive symptoms, | 13 (21.0) | 6 (20.7) | 0.976 |
CM indicates chronic migraine, IQR interquartile range, MHD monthly headache days, NRS Numerical Rating Scale