Abstract

Background: Polypharmacy in abortive medications is often inevitable for patients with refractory headaches.Objective: We seek to enumerate an exhaustive list of headaches abortive medications that are without drug-drug interactions.Methods: We updated a list of acute medications based on the widely used Jefferson Headache Manual with novel abortive medications including ubrogepant, lasmiditan, and rimegepant. Opioids and barbiturate-containing products are excluded. From this resultant list of medications, we then conducted an exhaustive search of all pair-wise interactions via DrugBank's API. Using this interaction list, we filtered all possible two, three, and four drug combinations of abortive medications. The list of medications was then reapplied to DrugBank to verify the lack of known drug-drug interactions.Results: There are 192 medication combinations that do not contain any drug-drug interactions. Most common elements in these combinations are ubrogepant, prochlorperazine, followed by tizanidine. There are 67 three-drug combinations that do not contain interactions. Only two of the four-drug combinations do not yield some form of drug-drug interactions.Conclusion: This list of headaches abortive medications without drug-drug interactions is a useful tool for clinicians seeking to more effectively manage refractory headaches by implementing a rational polypharmacy.

Highlights

  • Non-opioid and non-barbiturate containing acute therapies are staples of headache management (1)

  • In order to include a broad list of commonly used abortive medications, we included all medications listed in the acute therapy chapter of Jefferson Headache Manual, an influential headache handbook (6). (Tables 5.5, 5.7, 5.8, 5.14, 5.16) Since abortive medications are often used concurrently with “bridge” therapies, “bridge” medications are included in our list as well

  • This implies that this study identified all medication combinations that contain a potential drug-drug interaction based on DrugBank database

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Summary

Introduction

Non-opioid and non-barbiturate containing acute therapies are staples of headache management (1). Excessive use of analgesics can often lead to medication overuse headaches (2). Practitioners often use rational polypharmacy in order to manage refractory patients in real life clinical settings (4). Numerous articles have been published regarding medication interactions in headache medicine, we are unable to find a study conducting an exhaustive search for all medication combinations that are without interactions. We speculate that this is likely due to the heavy computational demands of achieving such an objective. Polypharmacy in abortive medications is often inevitable for patients with refractory headaches

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