Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
The choices continue to grow
This article originally appeared in BMJ USA
In the last 10 years, the management of migraine
headache has changed dramatically. The addition of the triptans has
been a breakthrough in the treatment of acute migraine
headache. The effectiveness of these medications in relieving the
severe pain, disability, and other migraine-associated symptoms has
reduced the proportion of patients who require prophylaxis for episodic migraine. Even frequently occurring migraines can be effectively treated with acute medications alone.
Clinicians and patients are now faced with the difficult decision of
when to start prophylactic drugs. It is estimated that preventive
therapies are used by only 3% to 5% of migraineurs.
1 2
Circumstances indicating the need for preventive treatment include: a)
two or more disabling headaches per month; b) ineffective symptomatic treatment; c) use of abortive medication more than twice per week; and
d) migraines with potential neurological sequelae.3
The mechanisms by which prophylactic drugs reduce migraine
frequency and severity remain unknown.4 Many agents appear
to have different pharmacological properties and multiple actions on
vascular structures and in the nervous system. Likewise, the relative
importance of each action is unknown. Therefore, the development of
preventive medications was based initially on clinical observations and
then supported by clinical trials. All except methysergide were
developed to treat other medical conditions. Their anti-migraine
effect was discovered serendipitously.
Currently, there are six established classes of agents used to prevent
migraine headache.3 These first-line therapies, which show
the greatest clinical efficacy with the fewest adverse effects, are
tricyclic antidepressants, This issue of BMJ USA includes a paper by Schrader et
al6 (BMJ USA p 91), which reports the results of a
randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial of
lisinopril in the prophylactic treatment of migraine. This represents a
new preventive drug class. This study followed recent methodology
outlined for clinical trials of migraine prophylaxis.7 The
primary outcome measures were hours with headache, number of days with
headache, and number of days with migraine. Results showed a reduction
by 20% (95% confidence interval, 5% to 36%), 17% (5% to 30%),
and 21% (9% to 34%), respectively. A small subset of patients
(14/47, 30%) experienced a greater than 50% reduction in the number
of migraine days. Unfortunately, the large confidence intervals make
the precise anti-migraine effect unknown and detract from the power of
the study. These results are similar to those of other well-designed migraine clinical trials that show a small anti-migraine effect for the
entire patient group but a substantial effect for subgroups.
As reviewed by Ramadan et al,8 the three most commonly
used drugs Currently, it is impossible to predict which patient will respond to a
particular medication. In clinical practice, decisions are typically
based on patient characteristics. Ideally, decisions should be made on
scientifically documented efficacy, past treatment response,
contraindications, side effects and tolerability, patient preference,
cost, and comorbid disease. Silberstein3 reviewed the
relative indications and contraindications for some comorbid conditions. Frequently, a good decision point for choosing a
prophylactic medication is comorbidity, associated symptoms, and
patient preference. For example, in patients with associated mild
depression and insomnia, a tricyclic antidepressant is an excellent
choice. Similarly, in patients with a history of migraine variability
coinciding with major depression, venlafaxine might be indicated. In
young male athletes with a tendency toward asthma or erectile
dysfunction and borderline hypertension, verapamil or lisinopril
probably would be superior to a In summary, lisinopril represents a new class of drug in the widening
array of prophylactic choices. The effectiveness of any single
medication probably depends mostly on patient characteristics, patient
preferences, and other illnesses. No single agent or class is better
for all patients.
Department of Neurology, Hennepin County Medical Center,
Minneapolis, MN, USA (clave003{at}tc.umn.edu)
-blockers, calcium channel blockers,
anti-inflammatory drugs, anti-serotonin agents (methysergide), and
anticonvulsants (divalproex sodium). Second-line therapies that are
emerging as new, but unproven, medications include the antidepressant
venlafaxine, the anticonvulsant drugs gabapentin and topiramate,
high-dose riboflavin and magnesium supplementation, and the herbs
feverfew and Petasites hybridus rhizoma.5
propranolol, amitriptyline, and verapamil
have not been shown irrefutably to prevent migraine. In this review, most of the
randomized trials of preventive anti-migraine drugs lacked scientific
robustness. Furthermore, for entire patient groups, the prophylactic
effect was not dramatic and did not exceed 50% over placebo. However,
individual patients were recognized to have had dramatic responses to
various medications. In clinical practice, this is typically what is
observed. This finding is not unexpected given the heterogeneity of the
migraine population. The best scientific evidence for migraine
prevention for a patient group exists for divalproex sodium. Recent
well-designed clinical trials have found divalproex sodium efficacious
for the prophylaxis of episodic, transformed, and pediatric migraines.
-blocker. Lastly, for women
considering pregnancy (a contraindication to almost all preventive
medications, except possibly magnesium supplementation), a more
aggressive preventive program could be designed to focus on lifestyle
change, trigger and stress management, and an intraoral splint for
associated jaw pain and nocturnal clinching. Given the individual
variability in drug response and anecdotal evidence of dramatic
responses to different drugs, it is reasonable to follow a poor
response to one drug with a trial of an alternate drug.
Footnotes
Papers (BMJ USA p 91)
| 1. | Edmeads J, Findlay H, Tugwell P, Pryse-Phillips W, Nelson RF, Murray TJ. Impact of migraine and tension-type headache on life-style, consulting behavior, and medication use: a Canadian population survey. Can J Neurol Sci 1993; 20: 131-137[ISI][Medline]. |
| 2. | Rasmussen BK, Jensen R, Olesen J. Impact of headache on sickness absence and utilisation of medical services: a Danish population study. J Epidemiol Community Health 1992; 46: 443-446[Abstract]. |
| 3. | Silberstein SD. Preventive treatment of migraine: An overview. Cephalalgia 1997; 17: 67-72[Medline]. |
| 4. | Goadsby PJ. How do the currently used prophylactic agents work in migraine? Cephalalgia 1997; 17: 85-92[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 5. | Grossmann M, Schmidramsl H. An extract of Petasites hybridus is effective in the prophylaxis of migraine. Internat J Clin Pharm Ther 2000; 38: 430-435[Medline]. |
| 6. |
Schrader H, Stovner LJ, Helde G, Sand T, Bovim G.
Prophylactic treatment of migraine with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (lisinopril): randomised, placebo controlled, crossover study.
BMJ
2001;
322:
19-22 |
| 7. | International Headache Society Committee on Clinical Trials in Migraine. Guidelines for controlled trials of drugs in migraine. Cephalalgia 1991; 11: 1-12. |
| 8. | Ramadan NM, Schultz LL, Gilkey SJ. Migraine prophylactic drugs: Proof of efficacy, utilization, and cost. Cephalalgia 1997; 17: 73-90[CrossRef][Medline]. |
Read all Rapid Responses
What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+