Analgesic rebound headache was recognized as a distinct entity and a substantive component in more than 40% of the practices of 174 surveyed practitioners. General practitioners, who see a wide variety of patient types with a spectrum of complaints, need to be able to diagnose analgesic rebound headache by taking a good history.
Sumatriptan, 50-mg tablets, are effective for the full spectrum of headaches experienced by patients with disabling migraine due to a sumatriptan-responsive mechanism.
Objective: To evaluate the impact of sumatriptan succinate injection compared with placebo on productivity loss during a migraine attack in the workplace.
Background: Eptinezumab is approved for migraine
prevention, with demonstrated rapid onset of preventive benefit. RELIEF
evaluated the efficacy and safety of eptinezumab initiated during a migraine
attack. Methods: RELIEF (NCT04152083; parallel-group,
double-blind, placebo-controlled) randomized adults with migraine (4-15d/mo
in 3mo prior to screening) to eptinezumab 100mg or placebo, administered IV
within 1-6h of qualifying migraine onset. Co-primary efficacy endpoints were
time to headache pain freedom and time to absence of most bothersome symptom
(MBS). Results: Eptinezumab (n=238) compared with
placebo (n=242) achieved significantly faster headache pain freedom (median
4h vs 9h; hazard ratio=1.54, P=0.0006) and
absence of MBS (2h vs 3h; 1.75, P<0.0001). At
2h, 23.5% and 12.0% (P=0.0009) of
eptinezumab-treated and placebo patients, respectively, reported headache
pain freedom, and 55.5% and 35.8% (P<0.0001)
reported absence of MBS. Significantly fewer eptinezumab-treated patients
used rescue medication within 24h (31.5% vs 59.9%;
P<0.0001). Treatment-emergent adverse
events occurred in 10.9% eptinezumab-treated and 10.3% placebo patients; no
serious adverse events occurred. Conclusions:
Infusion of the preventive migraine treatment, eptinezumab, during a
migraine resulted in rapid and sustained freedom from headache pain and MBS
vs placebo, starting 2h post-infusion, decreasing need for acute medication
within 24h post-infusion. No notable safety findings were
identified.
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