Abstract

BackgroundFocus on the frequency of migraine pain may undervalue the total burden of migraine as pain duration and severity may present unique, additive burden. A composite measure of total pain burden (TPB; frequency, severity, and duration) may provide a more comprehensive characterization of pain burden and treatment response in patients with episodic migraine (EM) or chronic migraine (CM). The impact of galcanezumab versus placebo on TPB among patients with EM or CM was analyzed.MethodsPatients from randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled episodic (two 6-month studies pooled) and chronic migraine (3-month) studies received once-monthly subcutaneous injection of galcanezumab 120 mg or placebo. A post hoc analysis of TPB for a given month was calculated as severity-weighted duration by multiplying duration (hours) and maximum pain severity (0 = none, 1 = mild, 2 = moderate, 3 = severe) of migraine for each day and summing these over the days in a month. Least square mean change from baseline in monthly TPB across Months 1–6 (EM, N = 444 galcanezumab, N = 894 placebo) and Months 1–3 (CM, N = 278 galcanezumab, N = 558 placebo) were compared using a mixed-model repeated measures model. Correlation of the Migraine Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire (MSQ) and Migraine Disability Assessment Scale (MIDAS) to TPB at baseline was assessed.ResultsAt baseline, the duration of migraine on a given migraine headache day accounted for the greatest unique proportion of variability (EM, 57.4% and CM, 61.1%) to TPB after adjusting for frequency of migraine headache days and maximum pain severity. The decrease from baseline in monthly TPB was greater with galcanezumab than placebo for patients with EM (68.6 versus 36.2) and CM (102.6 versus 44.4). The average percent reduction of TPB from baseline was significantly greater with galcanezumab compared with placebo in patients with EM (50.8% versus 17.2%) and CM (29.7% versus 11.0%). In patients with EM and CM, TPB correlated with MSQ total score (r = − 0.35 and r = − 0.37) and MIDAS (r = 0.34 and r = 0.32).ConclusionsGreater reduction in TPB was seen in patients with EM and CM treated with galcanezumab 120 mg once-monthly injection relative to placebo. Discussing TPB supports patient-centric conversations regarding treatment expectations when clinicians are evaluating options for migraine prevention.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov: #NCT02614183 (I5Q-MC-CGAG; EVOLVE-1), #NCT02614196 (I5Q-MC-CGAH; EVOLVE-2), and #NCT02614261 (I5Q-MC-CGAI; REGAIN) – all 3 trials were registered on 23 November 2015.

Highlights

  • Focus on the frequency of migraine pain may undervalue the total burden of migraine as pain duration and severity may present unique, additive burden

  • Greater reduction in total pain burden (TPB) was seen in patients with episodic migraine (EM) and chronic migraine (CM) treated with galcanezumab 120 mg once-monthly injection relative to placebo

  • The general baseline demographics and characteristics were balanced between treatment groups in the two episodic and one chronic migraine studies and have been previously well-described [12–14]

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Summary

Introduction

Focus on the frequency of migraine pain may undervalue the total burden of migraine as pain duration and severity may present unique, additive burden. As novel therapies designed for the preventive treatment of migraine have become available, little research has focused on the additional burden of severity and duration. Evaluating this composite measure may be more aligned to the personal pain experience in migraine and could be useful in supporting patient-centric discussions regarding treatment expectations when clinicians are evaluating options for migraine prevention. The efficacy of galcanezumab, as a preventive treatment for migraine, has been established across three randomized, double-blind, placebocontrolled, Phase 3 studies in patients with episodic migraine (EVOLVE-1 and EVOLVE-2) and chronic migraine (REGAIN). In those studies, galcanezumabtreated patients with episodic migraine experienced 4.3 to 4.7 fewer migraine headache days/month (versus 2.3 to 2.8 with placebo), and patients with chronic migraine had 4.8 fewer migraine headache days/month (versus 2.7 with placebo) [12–14]

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