Archive | 2021

Mab-Mig: Registry of the Spanish Neurological Society of Erenumab for Migraine Prevention. Three-Months Results

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


\n Background\n\nErenumab was approved in Europe for migraine prevention in patients with ≥4 monthly migraine days (MMD). In Spain, Novartis started a personalized managed access program which allowed free access to erenumab before official reimbursement. The Headache Study Group of the Spanish Neurological Society started a registry to monitor real-world safety and efficacy, and all Spanish headache experts were invited to participate.\n\nMethods\n\nPatients fulfilled ICHD3 criteria for migraine and had ≥ 4MMD. Sociodemographic and clinical data were registered as well as MMD, headache frequency (MHD), prior and concomitant preventive treatment, medication overuse headache (MOH), migraine evolution, adverse events, and PROs: HIT6, MIDAS, and PGIC. A >50% reduction of MMD after 3 months was considered as response.\n\nResults\n\nWe included 210 patients (female 86.7%, mean age 46.4 years old) from 22 hospitals from February 2019 – to – June 2020. Most patients (89.5%) suffered from chronic migraine with a mean evolution of 8.6 years. MOH was present in 70% of patients, and 17.1% had migraine with aura. Average of prior preventive treatment failure was >7 (BoNT/A had been used by 95.2%). Most patients (67,6%) started with erenumab 70mg. 61% of patients were also taking oral preventive drugs or getting simultaneous BoNT/A (27.6%). Responder rate was 37.1% and the mean reduction of MMD was -6.28 and MHD: -8.6. Regarding PROs: MIDAS: -35 p., HIT6: -11.6 p., PIGC: 4.7 p. Predictors of good response were: HIT6 score ( p =0.01), prior preventive treatment failures ( p =0.026), absence of MOH ( p =0.039), and simultaneous BoNT/A treatment ( p <0.001). 20% had adverse event, but only two of them were severe (0.9%) which led to treatment discontinuation. Mild constipation was the most frequent adverse event (8.1%).\n\nConclusion\n\nIn real-life, in a personalized managed access program, erenumab shows a good profile of efficacy and an excellent safety in migraine prevention in our cohort of refractory patients.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.21203/RS.3.RS-268641/V1
Language English
Journal None

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