Fremanezumab for the Preventive Treatment of Chronic Migraine
Thomas Jefferson University · Mayo Clinic Hospital · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Fremanezumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody targeting calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), is being investigated as a preventive treatment for migraine. We compared two fremanezumab dose regimens with placebo for the prevention of chronic migraine.
In this phase 3 trial, we randomly assigned patients with chronic migraine (defined as headache of any duration or severity on ≥15 days per month and migraine on ≥8 days per month) in a 1:1:1 ratio to receive fremanezumab quarterly (a single dose of 675 mg at baseline and placebo at weeks 4 and 8), fremanezumab monthly (675 mg at baseline and 225 mg at weeks 4 and 8), or matching placebo. Both fremanezumab and placebo were administered by means of subcutaneous injection. The primary end point was the mean change from baseline in the average number of headache days (defined as days in which headache pain lasted ≥4 consecutive hours and had a peak severity of at least a moderate level or days in which acute migraine-specific medication [triptans or ergots] was used to treat a headache of any severity or duration) per month during the 12 weeks after the first dose.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 50.09
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 20
Authors
10- SDStephen D. SilbersteinCorresponding
Thomas Jefferson University
- DWDavid W. Dodick
Mayo Clinic Hospital
- MEMarcelo E. Bigal
Teva Pharmaceuticals (United States)
- PYPaul Yeung
Teva Pharmaceuticals (United States)
- PJPeter J. Goadsby
King's College London, NIHR Wellcome Trust Southampton Clinical Research Facility, National Institute for Health Research
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Migraine
- Placebo
- Triptans
- Chronic Migraine
- Calcitonin gene-related peptide
- Internal medicine
- Clinical endpoint
- Good health and well-being