“Rational polypharmacy is common in the headache practice,” said Dr Victor Kaytser (Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, TX, USA). Migraine patients are often prescribed abortive and preventive medicines, as well as transition therapies. The current study aimed to estimate the probability of having an interaction of different medications.
Dr Kaytser and colleagues first listed commonly used abortive and preventive medicines, based on 2 papers: the American Headache Society Position Statement on integrating new migraine treatments into clinical practice and a paper on migraine care in the era of COVID-19 [2,3]. In total, 38 abortive medicines, including bridge medications, and 23 preventives, including valproic acid and amitriptyline, were included [1]. Neuromodulators were excluded. All possible combinations of ≤3 abortives and 3 preventives were obtained. To screen for interactions, the list was entered into the DrugBank and FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) application programming interface. If ≥1 interaction of any type was listed for a combination of drugs, then that combination was considered as interacting.
The chance of an interaction increased as the number of combinations of abortives and preventives increased. Venlafaxine and candesartan were among the most interacting in the preventive drug groups. Venlafaxine and amitriptyline were among the most interacting in the abortive versus preventive groups. The calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-based therapies and botulin toxin appeared to be the least interacting preventive drugs. The least interacting abortives were triptans.
Dr Kaytser concluded that FAERS may provide a useful and relevant tool for making risk-benefit decisions when choosing a headache regimen. A limitation of this study was that the significance or severity of an interaction was uncertain. Furthermore, newer drugs were found to have fewer interactions, but that could be explained by the fact that they have been studied less. In the FAERS method, one report is sufficient to indicate a contraindication, but this is a conservative approach. Finally, rarely used drugs appeared safer in FAERS, but this is likely due to underreporting.
- Kaytser V, et al. Estimating the Probability of Reported Versus Theoretical Drug-Drug Interactions in Headaches Medicine. AL01, IHC 2021, 8–12 September.
- American Headache Society. Headache. 2019;59(1):1-18.
- Szperka CL, et al. Headache. 2020;60(5):833–42.
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Table of Contents: IHC 2021
Featured articles
Letter from the Editor
COVID-19
Telemedicine beneficial for headache care during the pandemic
Comparison of headaches after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination
Grey matter cortical changes in patients with persistent headache after COVID-19
Increased risk of cerebral venous thrombosis in COVID-19
Patient Perception and Symptoms
Predictors of health-related quality of life in cluster headache
Dry eye disease is more prevalent in migraine
Voice change and throat swelling are cranial autonomic symptoms in primary headache
Association between physical inactivity and headache disorders
Increased suicidal attempts and risks of ideation in medication-overuse headache
Cardioembolic Comorbidities
AI-enabled ECG algorithm predicts atrial fibrillation risk in migraine
Migraine may not be a risk factor for stroke
Imaging
Functional brainstem somatotopy of the trigeminal nerve during nociception
Morphological changes in cluster headache between attacks
Interictal pontine metabolism in migraine patients without aura
Genome-Wide Association Studies
Largest genome-wide association study of migraine to date
Robust evidence that cluster headache has a genetic basis
Pharmacological Treatment
Insights in drug-drug interactions facilitate rational polypharmacy
Rimegepant confers long-term improvements in MMDs
First real-world effectiveness data of erenumab is promising
Galcanezumab effective in patients with episodic or chronic cluster headache
Central effects and affected somatosensory processing with galcanezumab in migraine
Long-term safety and tolerability of atogepant in migraine
Non-Pharmacological Treatment
Occipital nerve stimulation effective and safe in chronic cluster headache
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