BMJ: British Medical Journal: Published September 2024
Migraine is a neurological disorder characterized by
disabling, recurrent episodes of moderate to severe headache and accompanying
symptoms lasting up to 72 hours. The acute management of migraine episodes consists of drug
interventions aimed at providing rapid and sustained pain relief, and, ideally,
freedom from pain. Several drugs with different mechanisms of action are
available.
TAKE-HOME
MESSAGE
This large systematic review and
meta-analysis evaluated the effectiveness of various treatments for acute
migraine. The results showed that eletriptan was the most effective in
relieving pain at 2 hours, followed by rizatriptan, sumatriptan, and
zolmitriptan.
Eletriptan and ibuprofen had the
highest rates of sustained pain relief.
All interventions were superior to
placebo in relieving pain; however, triptans displayed greater efficacy than
newer drugs, such as lasmiditan, rimegepant, and ubrogepant.
Eletriptan and rizatriptan are likely
the most effective medications for acute migraine, followed by other
medications in the triptan class, then newer novel drugs.
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, such as ibuprofen, are highly effective and have good evidence of providing sustained relief.
CONCLUSIONS
Overall, eletriptan, rizatriptan, sumatriptan, and
zolmitriptan had the best profiles and they were more efficacious than the
recently marketed drugs lasmiditan, rimegepant, and ubrogepant. Although cost
effectiveness analyses are warranted and careful consideration should be given
to patients with a high risk cardiovascular profile, the most effective
triptans should be considered as preferred acute treatment for migraine and
included in the WHO List of Essential Medicines to promote global accessibility
and uniform standards of care.
OBJECTIVE
To compare all licensed drug interventions as oral
monotherapy for the acute treatment of migraine episodes in adults.
DESIGN
Systematic review and network meta-analysis.
DATA SOURCES
Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Medline,
Embase, ClinicalTrials.gov, EU Clinical Trials Register, WHO International
Clinical Trials Registry Platform, as well as websites of regulatory agencies
and pharmaceutical companies without language restrictions until 24 June 2023.
METHODS
Screening, data extraction, coding, and risk of bias
assessment were performed independently and in duplicate. Random effects
network meta-analyses were conducted for the primary analyses. The primary
outcomes were the proportion of participants who were pain-free at two hours
post-dose and the proportion of participants with sustained pain freedom from
two to 24 hours post-dose, both without the use of rescue drugs. Certainty of
the evidence was graded using the confidence in network meta-analysis (CINeMA)
online tool. Vitruvian plots were used to summarise findings. An international
panel of clinicians and people with lived experience of migraine co-designed
the study and interpreted the findings.
ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA FOR SELECTING STUDIES
Double blind randomised trials of adults (≥18 years) with a
diagnosis of migraine according to the International Classification of Headache
Disorders.
RESULTS
137 randomised controlled trials comprising 89 445
participants allocated to one of 17 active interventions or placebo were
included. All active interventions showed superior efficacy compared with
placebo for pain freedom at two hours (odds ratios from 1.73 (95% confidence
interval (CI) 1.27 to 2.34) for naratriptan to 5.19 (4.25 to 6.33) for
eletriptan), and most of them also for sustained pain freedom to 24 hours (odds
ratios from 1.71 (1.07 to 2.74) for celecoxib to 7.58 (2.58 to 22.27) for
ibuprofen). In head-to-head comparisons between active interventions,
eletriptan was the most effective drug for pain freedom at two hours (odds
ratios from 1.46 (1.18 to 1.81) to 3.01 (2.13 to 4.25)), followed by
rizatriptan (1.59 (1.18 to 2.17) to 2.44 (1.75 to 3.45)), sumatriptan (1.35
(1.03 to 1.75) to 2.04 (1.49 to 2.86)), and zolmitriptan (1.47 (1.04 to 2.08)
to 1.96 (1.39 to 2.86)). For sustained pain freedom, the most efficacious
interventions were eletriptan and ibuprofen (odds ratios from 1.41 (1.02 to
1.93) to 4.82 (1.31 to 17.67)). Confidence in accordance with CINeMA ranged
from high to very low. Sensitivity analyses on Food and Drug Administration
licensed doses only, high versus low doses, risk of bias, and moderate to
severe headache at baseline confirmed the main findings for both primary and
secondary outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS
Overall, eletriptan, rizatriptan, sumatriptan, and
zolmitriptan had the best profiles and they were more efficacious than the
recently marketed drugs lasmiditan, rimegepant, and ubrogepant. Although cost
effectiveness analyses are warranted and careful consideration should be given
to patients with a high risk cardiovascular profile, the most effective
triptans should be considered as preferred acute treatment for migraine and
included in the WHO List of Essential Medicines to promote global accessibility
and uniform standards of care.
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