Migraine: Expanding our Tx arsenal
Beyond tried-and-true therapies are new therapeutic targets on the horizon—giving you a bigger toolbox to help patients abort and prevent migraine episodes.
PRACTICE RECOMMENDATIONS
› Offer treatment with a triptan to adult patients with moderate-to-severe episodic migraine. A
› Consider prescribing topiramate, divalproex sodium, metoprolol, propranolol, or the herbal, Petasites hybridum, for the prevention of recurrent episodic migraine that has not responded to a reduction in headache triggers. A
› Add onabotulinumtoxinA injection to your therapeutic toolbox as an effective preventive treatment for chronic migraine (≥15 headache days a month for 3 months). B
› Recommend magnesium and feverfew as adjunctive preventive treatments for migraine. B
Strength of recommendation (SOR)
A Good-quality patient-oriented evidence
B Inconsistent or limited-quality patient-oriented evidence
C Consensus, usual practice, opinion, disease-oriented evidence, case series
Butterbur, in particular, has been found to be beneficial for migraine prevention in 2 small placebo-controlled trials. In a randomized controlled study of 245 patients P hybridus, (specifically, the German formulation, Petadolex), 75 mg BID, reduced the frequency of migraine attack by 48% at 4 months, compared to placebo (number needed to treat, 5.3).44 No difference was found at lower dosages. The most common reported adverse effect was burping.
Regrettably, unpurified butterbur extract contains pyrrolizidine alkaloids, potentially hepatotoxic and carcinogenic compounds. Because of variations in purification in production facilities in the United States, butterbur supplements might not have all of these compounds removed—and so should be used with caution.41
Magnesium. Studies evaluating the use of magnesium have demonstrated varied results; differences in methods and dosing have limited broad application of findings. As with most supplements considered for prophylactic treatment, magnesium dosing is poorly understood, and bioavailability varies in its different forms. Oral supplementation can be given as magnesium dicitrate, 600 mg/d.45
Recently, products containing various combinations of feverfew, coenzyme Q10, riboflavin, magnesium, and other supplements have shown benefit in early clinical trials.36,37
Neural stimulation. Over the past few years, a variety of transcutaneous nerve stimulator devices have gained FDA approval for use in migraine prophylaxis. The long-term safety and efficacy of these devices is not yet well understood, but they appear to provide headache relief in the short term and decrease the frequency of headache.38 Use of the noninvasive stimulators is limited today by high cost and poor coverage by US health care insurers.
Continue to: Newly available medical therapy