The Journal of Headache and Pain | |
Randomized, double-blind, crossover study comparing DFN-11 injection (3 mg subcutaneous sumatriptan) with 6 mg subcutaneous sumatriptan for the treatment of rapidly-escalating attacks of episodic migraine | |
Research Article | |
Roger K. Cady1  Ryan J. Cady1  Heather R. Manley1  Elimor Brand-Schieber2  Sagar Munjal2  | |
[1] Clinvest/A Division of Banyan Inc., 3805 S Kansas Expy, 65807, Springfield, MO, USA;Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories Ltd., 107 College Road East, 08540, Princeton, NJ, USA; | |
关键词: Episodic; Migraine; Rapidly-escalating; Treatment; Sumatriptan; Subcutaneous; | |
DOI : 10.1186/s10194-016-0717-7 | |
received in 2016-12-03, accepted in 2016-12-21, 发布年份 2017 | |
来源: Springer | |
【 摘 要 】
BackgroundA 6-mg dose of SC sumatriptan is the most efficacious and fast-acting acute treatment for migraine, but a 3-mg dose of SC sumatriptan may improve tolerability while maintaining efficacy.MethodsThis randomized, double-blind, crossover study compared the efficacy and tolerability of 3 mg subcutaneous (SC) sumatriptan (DFN-11) with 6 mg SC sumatriptan in 20 adults with rapidly-escalating migraine attacks. Eligible subjects were randomized (1:1) to treat 1 attack with DFN-11 and matching placebo autoinjector consecutively or 2 DFN-11 autoinjectors consecutively and a second attack similarly but with the alternative dose (3 mg or 6 mg).ResultsThe proportions of subjects who were pain-free at 60 min postdose, the primary endpoint, were similar following treatment with 3 mg SC sumatriptan and 6 mg SC sumatriptan (50% vs 52.6%, P = .87). The proportions of subjects experiencing pain relief (P ≥ .48); reductions in migraine pain intensity (P ≥ .78); and relief from nausea, photophobia, or phonophobia (P ≥ .88) with 3 mg SC sumatriptan and 6 mg SC sumatriptan were similar, as were the mean scores for satisfaction with treatment (M = 2.6 vs M = 2.4, P = .81) and the mean number of rescue medications used (M = .11 vs M = .26, P = .32). The most common adverse events with the 3- and 6-mg doses were triptan sensations — paresthesia, neck pain, flushing, and involuntary muscle contractions of the neck — and the incidence of adverse events with both doses was similar (32 events total: 3 mg, n = 14 [44%]; 6 mg, n = 18 [56%], P = .60). Triptan sensations affected 4 subjects with the 6-mg dose only, 1 subject with the 3-mg dose only, and 7 subjects with both sumatriptan doses. Chest pain affected 2 subjects (10%) treated with the 6-mg dose and no subjects (0%) treated with the 3-mg dose of DFN-11. There were no serious adverse events.ConclusionsThe 3-mg SC dose of sumatriptan in DFN-11 provided relief of migraine pain and associated symptoms comparable to a 6-mg SC dose of sumatriptan. Tolerability was similar with both study medications; DFN-11 treatment was associated with fewer triptan sensations than the 6-mg dose. DFN-11, with its 3-mg dose of sumatriptan, may be a clinically useful alternative to higher-dose autoinjectors.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
© The Author(s). 2017
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO202310138488753ZK.pdf | 655KB | download |
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