| Literature DB >> 33026631 |
Hans-Christoph Diener1, David W Dodick2, Richard B Lipton3, Aubrey Manack Adams4, Ronald E DeGryse5, Stephen D Silberstein6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The double-blind, phase 3 PREEMPT trials demonstrated the efficacy and tolerability of onabotulinumtoxinA for headache prevention in adults with chronic migraine. This post hoc analysis evaluated the effect of onabotulinumtoxinA on clinically meaningful changes in headache severity, headache-related impact, and quality of life.Entities:
Keywords: Botulinum toxin type A; Chronic migraine; Quality of life; Responder rate
Year: 2020 PMID: 33026631 PMCID: PMC7648806 DOI: 10.1007/s40122-020-00198-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Ther
Pooled PREEMPT baseline patient demographics and characteristics
| OnabotulinumtoxinA ( | Placebo ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD), years | 41.1 (10.4) | 41.5 (10.7) |
| Female, % | 87.6 | 85.2 |
| White, % | 89.7 | 90.5 |
| Frequency of headache days, mean (SD) | 19.9 (3.7) | 19.8 (3.7) |
| Frequency of moderate/severe headache days, mean (SD) | 18.1 (4.1) | 18.0 (4.3) |
| HIT-6 total score, mean (SD) | 65.5 (4.1) | 65.4 (4.3) |
| MSQ domain score, mean (SD) | ||
| Role Function-Restrictive | 38.5 (16.6) | 38.7 (17.3) |
| Role Function-Preventive | 56.0 (21.2) | 56.1 (21.7) |
| Emotional Function | 42.1 (24.1) | 42.4 (25.0) |
HIT-6 6-item Headache Impact Test, MSQ Migraine-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire, PREEMPT Phase 3 REsearch Evaluating Migraine Prophylaxis Therapy, SD standard deviation
Fig. 1Responder rates for various outcome measures (mLOCF) for weeks 21–24 relative to the pretreatment baseline. a Includes any patient who achieved at least one of these four criteria: at least a 50% reduction in headache days, clinically meaningful change in the HIT-6 total score, MSQ-RFR domain score, or headache severity at week 24. ADHS Average Daily Headache Severity, HIT-6 6-item Headache Impact Test, MSQ-RFR Migraine-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire Role Function-Restrictive
Fig. 2Percentage of patients who were responders on ≥ 1, ≥ 2, ≥ 3, and 4 outcome measures. Any patient who achieved at least one of these four outcome measures—50% reduction in headache days, or clinically meaningful change in HIT-6, MSQ-RFR, or headache severity at week 24—was counted as a responder. HIT-6 6-item Headache Impact Test, MSQ-RFR Migraine-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire Role Function-Restrictive
Linear regression results at 24 weeks
| Regression model | Slope | R-squared | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ∆ HIT-6 score vs. ∆ headache days | 0.45 | 0.20 | < 0.0001 |
| ∆ MSQ-RFR score vs. ∆ headache days | –1.46 | 0.21 | < 0.0001 |
HIT-6 6-item Headache Impact Test, MSQ-RFR Migraine-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire Role Function-Restrictive
Fig. 3Number of patients who met all possible responder criteria combinations. Areas defined by the intersections are not proportional. ADHS Average Daily Headache Severity, HA headache, HIT-6 6-item Headache Impact Test, MSQ-RFR Migraine-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire Role Function-Restrictive
Summary of overall AEs reported in the 24-week, double-blind phase [10]a
| OnabotulinumtoxinA ( | Placebo ( | |
|---|---|---|
| All AEs | 429 (62.4) | 358 (51.7) |
| TRAEs | 202 (29.4) | 88 (12.7) |
| SAEs | 33 (4.8) | 16 (2.3) |
| Serious TRAEs | 1 (0.1) | 0 (0.0) |
| Discontinuations related to AEs | 26 (3.8) | 8 (1.2) |
| Death | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
AE adverse event, SAE serious adverse event, TRAE treatment-related adverse event
aReproduced with permission from John Wiley & Sons Inc. Dodick DW et al., Headache. 2010;50:921–936
| The proportion of patients who achieve at least a 50% reduction in headache days is said to be 50% headache responders, and, at times, this criterion is used as an empirical review for continuing or discontinuing preventive therapy. |
| However, it is recognized that 50% responder rates may not fully capture the benefits of preventive treatment. |
| Therefore, we conducted a post hoc analysis of data from the PREEMPT trials to evaluate the effect of onabotulinum-toxinA on clinically meaningful changes in headache severity, headache-related impact, and quality of life. |
| Measurement of the change in the number of headache days did not fully capture the treatment benefit associated with 24 weeks of onabotulinumtoxinA treatment for chronic migraine. |
| When taking into account clinically meaningful improvements of impact, function, and severity, we observed a more accurate reflection of the comprehensive benefit of onabotulinumtoxinA. |