Abstract

BackgroundSeveral drugs are available for the preventive treatment of both episodic and chronic migraine. The choice of which therapy to initiate first, second, or third is not straightforward and is based on multiple factors, including general efficacy, tolerability, potential for serious adverse events, comorbid conditions, and costs. Recently, a new class of migraine preventive drugs was introduced, i.e. monoclonal antibodies against calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) or its receptor.MethodsThe present article summarizes the evidence gathered with this new migraine preventive drug class from randomized placebo-controlled clinical trials. It further puts this into perspective next to the evidence gained by the most widely used agents for the prevention of episodic and chronic migraine with an emphasis on efficacy and the robustness with which this efficacy signal was obtained.ResultsAlthough being a relatively new class of migraine preventive drugs, monoclonal antibodies blocking the CGRP pathway have an efficacy which is at least comparable if not higher than those of the currently used preventive drugs. Moreover, the robustness of this efficacy signal is substantiated by several randomized clinical trials each including large numbers of patients. In addition, because of their excellent tolerability and with long-term safety data emerging, they seem to have an unprecedented efficacy over adverse effect profile, clearly resulting in an added value for migraine prevention.ConclusionsBalancing the data presented in the current manuscript with additional data concerning long term safety on the one hand and cost issues on the other hand, can be of particular use to health policy makers to implement this new drug class in the prevention of migraine.

Highlights

  • Several drugs are available for the preventive treatment of both episodic and chronic migraine

  • The discovery of this new drug target resulted in the development of the first disease-specific preventive treatment class for both episodic migraine (EM) and chronic migraine (CM), being monoclonal antibodies against the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) molecule or its receptor complex (CGRP monoclonal antibody (mAb))

  • Results from all 4 CGRP mAb were lumped, considering their comparable mechanism of action and the fact that so far no clear difference in efficacy appears from clinical trials no head-to-head trials have been performed

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Summary

Introduction

Several drugs are available for the preventive treatment of both episodic and chronic migraine. The presence of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in the trigeminovascular system, the observation of CGRP release during the headache phase of a migraine attack and the induction of a migraine-like headache after intravenous administration of exogenous CGRP, have led to the assumption that CGRP plays a major role in the pathophysiology of migraine [7]. The discovery of this new drug target resulted in the development of the first disease-specific preventive treatment class for both EM and CM, being monoclonal antibodies against the CGRP molecule (eptinezumab, fremanezumab and galcanezumab) or its receptor complex (erenumab) (CGRP mAb)

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