The proportion of patients achieving a 30% or 50% reduction in MMDs relative to baseline is considered clinically meaningful and is therefore recommended as a primary or key secondary trial endpoint per the most recent guidelines [3,4].
BHV3000-201 (NCT03266588) was a 52-week, open-label, phase 2/3, multicentre, long-term safety study investigating rimegepant for the acute treatment of migraine [2]. Among >1,000 participants with ≥6 MMDs at baseline who were included in the current post hoc analysis, mean age was 43.2 years and 91.1% were women. The mean disease duration was 22.5 years, 40.6% of patients had a history of migraine with aura, and mean MMDs at baseline was 10.9 days.
Treatment with 75 mg rimegepant resulted in a median time to ≥30% reduction in MMDs of 12 weeks and a median time to ≥50% reduction of 32 weeks (see Figure). MMD reduction was observed over time regardless of baseline migraine frequency, including low-frequency (baseline MMDs 8.7 days), moderate-frequency (baseline MMDs 11.5 days), and high-frequency (baseline MMDs 14.8 days) cluster groups. Higher baseline MMDs were associated with a longer time to achieve ≥30% or ≥50% MMD reduction.
Figure: Kaplan-Meier plots of time to 30% or 50% reduction in MMDs from baseline in the 6–14 MMD group treated with rimegepant [2]
In addition, the mean number of tablets per migraine type and the mean number of tablets over time were assessed. “After an initial period of 4–8 weeks, we observed a stabilisation of the utilisation across the 3 MMD clusters,” said Mr Evan Popoff (Broadstreet Health Economics & Outcomes Research, Canada). All ratios were consistently <1, implying that patients did not treat every migraine attack with rimegepant. These ratios became 0.7–0.9 during follow up across clusters. Furthermore, the absolute tablet count remained relatively constant given the corresponding trend towards fewer MMDs.
In conclusion, long-term acute treatment of migraine with rimegepant on an as-needed basis was associated with clinically relevant reductions in MMDs without evidence of medication-related increases in headache frequency. These findings are consistent with the preventive benefits of rimegepant demonstrated in a recent placebo-controlled study [1].
- Croop R, et al. Lancet. 2021;397(10268):51–60.
- Popoff E, et al. Acute treatment with rimegepant 75 mg confers long term improvements in median time to 30% and 50% reductions in monthly migraine days – post hoc results from an open label safety study (BHV3000-201). AL074, IHC 2021, 8–12 September.
- Tassorelli C, et al. Cephalalgia. 2018;38(5):815–32.
- Ailani J, et al. Headache. 2021;61(7):1021–39.
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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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