| Literature DB >> 36038833 |
Peter McAllister1, Joshua M Cohen2, Verena Ramirez Campos2, Xiaoping Ning2, Lindsay Janka2, Steve Barash2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Migraine is the second leading cause of disability worldwide. Although many preventive treatments reduce migraine frequency and severity, it is unclear whether these treatments reduce migraine-related disability in a clinically meaningful way. This pooled analysis evaluated the ability of fremanezumab to reduce migraine-related disability, based on responses and shifts in severity in patient-reported disability outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Disability; Fremanezumab; HIT-6; MIDAS; Migraine; Preventive
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36038833 PMCID: PMC9422163 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-022-01438-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 8.588
AHS consensus statement–defined clinically meaningful improvements on the HIT-6 and MIDAS [7]
| Assessment tool | Meaningful improvement as defined by AHS Consensus Statement |
|---|---|
| HIT-6 | • Reduction from baseline of ≥5 points |
| MIDAS | • Reduction of ≥5 points when baseline score is 11–20 (moderate disability) or • Reduction of ≥30% when baseline score is > 20 (severe disability) |
AHS American Headache Society, HIT-6 6-Item Headache Impact Test, MIDAS Migraine Disability Assessment
Baseline and demographic characteristics
| HIT-6 analysis population | MIDAS analysis population | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | Quarterly fremanezumab | Monthly fremanezumab | Placebo | Quarterly fremanezumab | Monthly fremanezumab | Placebo |
| Age, years, mean (SD) | 43.6 (12.0) | 42.9 (11.9) | 43.7 (12.0) | 43.4 (11.4) | 44.5 (11.9) | 44.0 (11.9) |
| Age category, n (%) | ||||||
| 18–45 years | 343 (53) | 376 (57) | 350 (54) | 303 (53) | 290 (50) | 305 (54) |
| 46–65 years | 293 (45) | 274 (41) | 290 (44) | 254 (45) | 272 (47) | 248 (44) |
| > 65 years | 16 (2) | 14 (2) | 12 (2) | 10 (2) | 13 (2) | 17 (3) |
| Sex, n (%) | ||||||
| Female | 560 (86) | 570 (86) | 561 (86) | 480 (85) | 483 (84) | 478 (84) |
| Male | 92 (14) | 94 (14) | 91 (14) | 87 (15) | 92 (16) | 26.3 (4.7) |
| BMI, kg/m2, mean (SD) | 26.0 (4.9) | 26.0 (4.8) | 26.0 (4.7) | 26.0 (4.7) | 25.7 (4.8) | |
| Migraine classification, n (%) | ||||||
| CM | 545 (84) | 553 (83) | 541 (83) | 169 (30) | 174 (30) | 166 (29) |
| EM | 107 (16) | 111 (17) | 111 (17) | 398 (70) | 401 (70) | 404 (71) |
| Baseline HIT-6 score, mean (SD) | 64.3 (4.6) | 64.3 (4.5) | 64.1 (4.9) | – | – | – |
| Baseline MIDAS score, mean (SD) | – | – | – | 51.4 (42.8) | 50.0 (44.7) | 49.2 (46.2) |
SD standard deviation, BMI body mass index, CM chronic migraine, EM episodic migraine, HIT-6 6-Item Headache Impact Test, MIDAS Migraine Disability Assessment
Fig. 1Severity of A) headache impact (HIT-6)a and B) migraine-related disability (MIDAS)b at study baseline. HIT-6, 6-item Headache Impact Test; MIDAS, Migraine Disability Assessment. aHIT-6 score categories: ≤49 = little or no impact; 50–55 = some impact; 56–59 = substantial impact; 60–78 = severe impact. bMIDAS score grades: 0–5 = minimal or infrequent disability; 6–10 = mild or infrequent disability; 11–20 = moderate disability; ≥21 = severe disability
Fig. 2Proportion of patients experiencing A) clinically meaningful (≥5-point) reduction in HIT-6 and B) clinically meaningful reductions in MIDAS scores during 12 weeks of treatment. HIT-6, 6-item Headache Impact Test; MIDAS, Migraine Disability Assessment. MIDAS: severe baseline disability = baseline MIDAS score, > 20; moderate baseline disability = baseline MIDAS score, 11–20; clinically meaningful reduction in MIDAS score = ≥30% reduction for severe disability and ≥ 5-point reduction for moderate disability. n values shown are the number of patients with data available for analysis of change in HIT-6 or MIDAS scores at the end of treatment. aP < 0.0001 versus placebo. bP = 0.0006 versus placebo. cP = 0.0093 versus placebo. dP = 0.0137 versus placebo
Fig. 3Proportion of patients experiencing downward shifts in A) HIT-6 severity categories and B) MIDAS severity grades during 12 weeks of treatment. HIT-6, 6-item Headache Impact Test; MIDAS, Migraine Disability Assessment. n values shown are the number of patients with data available for analysis of shift in disability severity category in HIT-6 or MIDAS scores at the end of treatment. Total proportion of patients with a downward shift of 1, 2, or 3 categories or grades (as shown at the top of each bar) may differ from the sum of the proportions of patients with downward shifts of 1, 2, or 3 categories or grades due to rounding. aP < 0.0001 versus placebo