Article Type
Changed
Mon, 01/07/2019 - 10:31
Patients offer candid assessments of currently available prophylactic treatments for migraine.

BOSTON—Effectiveness and tolerability were the key factors influencing patients’ satisfaction with prophylactic migraine medications, according to a study presented at the 59th Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Headache Society. “There is an unmet need for treatments that have better efficacy and tolerability profiles than existing prophylactic migraine medications,” said lead author Marci Clark, PharmD, Director of Patient-Centered Outcomes Assessment at RTI Health Solutions in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on behalf of her study collaborators.

Marci Clark, PharmD

To gain insight into reasons for patient satisfaction or dissatisfaction with prophylactic migraine medications and identify medication characteristics that would increase patient satisfaction with future prophylactic migraine medications, the researchers recruited study participants from research facilities in Charlotte, North Carolina; St. Louis, Missouri; Southfield, Michigan; and Tampa, Florida. Individuals were eligible to participate if they met the following self-reported criteria: age 18 to 55, physician diagnosis of migraine for 12 or more months, current or prior experience taking one or more prescription prophylactic migraine medication in the past six months, experiencing four or more migraine headache days per month, and further classification as having episodic or chronic migraine (based on the headache/migraine days reported). Individual discussions with all participants were conducted by two experienced interviewers.

Forty participants were recruited and interviewed; 36 met all eligibility criteria. Twenty-one participants met the criteria for episodic migraine, 15 met the criteria for chronic migraine, and four participants, who were current migraineurs, were unable to be classified as episodic or chronic migraine. Participants provided feedback on 20 prescription prophylactic migraine medications. The most commonly used current or prior migraine prophylactics were topiramate (n = 27), amitriptyline (n = 6), propranolol (n = 6), onabotulinumtoxinA (n = 5), and zonisamide (n = 3).

In general, medication effectiveness and tolerability were the most influential factors on patient satisfaction or dissatisfaction with their prophylactic migraine medications. Lack of efficacy, cited by 56% of respondents, was the most frequently reported reason for participants’ dissatisfaction with their medications. Regarding tolerability, 51% of participants reported that a particular side effect was the most dissatisfying characteristic of their medication. The most bothersome side effects reported by participants were memory loss (n = 6), dizziness or light-headedness (n = 5), tiredness/drowsiness/grogginess/sluggishness (n = 5), nausea (n = 3), and dry mouth (n = 2).

Among those who were satisfied with their prophylactic migraine medications, decreased migraine frequency was the most common reason for their satisfaction (65%), followed by decreased migraine severity or intensity, which was reported by 28% of participants.

The most frequently reported desirable characteristics of a new prophylactic migraine medication that would increase participants’ satisfaction were related to the medication’s ability to decrease the frequency and severity or intensity of migraines. Nausea (36%), weight gain (26%), dizziness/light-headedness (23%), drowsiness/grogginess (15%), and memory loss, including the ability to remember words and speak clearly (13%), are side effects that patients reported that they do not want to see in a new or future prophylactic migraine medication.

Meeting/Event
Publications
Topics
Legacy Keywords
Migraine, migraine prophylaxis, Marci Clark, Neurology Reviews
Sections
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event
Patients offer candid assessments of currently available prophylactic treatments for migraine.
Patients offer candid assessments of currently available prophylactic treatments for migraine.

BOSTON—Effectiveness and tolerability were the key factors influencing patients’ satisfaction with prophylactic migraine medications, according to a study presented at the 59th Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Headache Society. “There is an unmet need for treatments that have better efficacy and tolerability profiles than existing prophylactic migraine medications,” said lead author Marci Clark, PharmD, Director of Patient-Centered Outcomes Assessment at RTI Health Solutions in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on behalf of her study collaborators.

Marci Clark, PharmD

To gain insight into reasons for patient satisfaction or dissatisfaction with prophylactic migraine medications and identify medication characteristics that would increase patient satisfaction with future prophylactic migraine medications, the researchers recruited study participants from research facilities in Charlotte, North Carolina; St. Louis, Missouri; Southfield, Michigan; and Tampa, Florida. Individuals were eligible to participate if they met the following self-reported criteria: age 18 to 55, physician diagnosis of migraine for 12 or more months, current or prior experience taking one or more prescription prophylactic migraine medication in the past six months, experiencing four or more migraine headache days per month, and further classification as having episodic or chronic migraine (based on the headache/migraine days reported). Individual discussions with all participants were conducted by two experienced interviewers.

Forty participants were recruited and interviewed; 36 met all eligibility criteria. Twenty-one participants met the criteria for episodic migraine, 15 met the criteria for chronic migraine, and four participants, who were current migraineurs, were unable to be classified as episodic or chronic migraine. Participants provided feedback on 20 prescription prophylactic migraine medications. The most commonly used current or prior migraine prophylactics were topiramate (n = 27), amitriptyline (n = 6), propranolol (n = 6), onabotulinumtoxinA (n = 5), and zonisamide (n = 3).

In general, medication effectiveness and tolerability were the most influential factors on patient satisfaction or dissatisfaction with their prophylactic migraine medications. Lack of efficacy, cited by 56% of respondents, was the most frequently reported reason for participants’ dissatisfaction with their medications. Regarding tolerability, 51% of participants reported that a particular side effect was the most dissatisfying characteristic of their medication. The most bothersome side effects reported by participants were memory loss (n = 6), dizziness or light-headedness (n = 5), tiredness/drowsiness/grogginess/sluggishness (n = 5), nausea (n = 3), and dry mouth (n = 2).

Among those who were satisfied with their prophylactic migraine medications, decreased migraine frequency was the most common reason for their satisfaction (65%), followed by decreased migraine severity or intensity, which was reported by 28% of participants.

The most frequently reported desirable characteristics of a new prophylactic migraine medication that would increase participants’ satisfaction were related to the medication’s ability to decrease the frequency and severity or intensity of migraines. Nausea (36%), weight gain (26%), dizziness/light-headedness (23%), drowsiness/grogginess (15%), and memory loss, including the ability to remember words and speak clearly (13%), are side effects that patients reported that they do not want to see in a new or future prophylactic migraine medication.

BOSTON—Effectiveness and tolerability were the key factors influencing patients’ satisfaction with prophylactic migraine medications, according to a study presented at the 59th Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Headache Society. “There is an unmet need for treatments that have better efficacy and tolerability profiles than existing prophylactic migraine medications,” said lead author Marci Clark, PharmD, Director of Patient-Centered Outcomes Assessment at RTI Health Solutions in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on behalf of her study collaborators.

Marci Clark, PharmD

To gain insight into reasons for patient satisfaction or dissatisfaction with prophylactic migraine medications and identify medication characteristics that would increase patient satisfaction with future prophylactic migraine medications, the researchers recruited study participants from research facilities in Charlotte, North Carolina; St. Louis, Missouri; Southfield, Michigan; and Tampa, Florida. Individuals were eligible to participate if they met the following self-reported criteria: age 18 to 55, physician diagnosis of migraine for 12 or more months, current or prior experience taking one or more prescription prophylactic migraine medication in the past six months, experiencing four or more migraine headache days per month, and further classification as having episodic or chronic migraine (based on the headache/migraine days reported). Individual discussions with all participants were conducted by two experienced interviewers.

Forty participants were recruited and interviewed; 36 met all eligibility criteria. Twenty-one participants met the criteria for episodic migraine, 15 met the criteria for chronic migraine, and four participants, who were current migraineurs, were unable to be classified as episodic or chronic migraine. Participants provided feedback on 20 prescription prophylactic migraine medications. The most commonly used current or prior migraine prophylactics were topiramate (n = 27), amitriptyline (n = 6), propranolol (n = 6), onabotulinumtoxinA (n = 5), and zonisamide (n = 3).

In general, medication effectiveness and tolerability were the most influential factors on patient satisfaction or dissatisfaction with their prophylactic migraine medications. Lack of efficacy, cited by 56% of respondents, was the most frequently reported reason for participants’ dissatisfaction with their medications. Regarding tolerability, 51% of participants reported that a particular side effect was the most dissatisfying characteristic of their medication. The most bothersome side effects reported by participants were memory loss (n = 6), dizziness or light-headedness (n = 5), tiredness/drowsiness/grogginess/sluggishness (n = 5), nausea (n = 3), and dry mouth (n = 2).

Among those who were satisfied with their prophylactic migraine medications, decreased migraine frequency was the most common reason for their satisfaction (65%), followed by decreased migraine severity or intensity, which was reported by 28% of participants.

The most frequently reported desirable characteristics of a new prophylactic migraine medication that would increase participants’ satisfaction were related to the medication’s ability to decrease the frequency and severity or intensity of migraines. Nausea (36%), weight gain (26%), dizziness/light-headedness (23%), drowsiness/grogginess (15%), and memory loss, including the ability to remember words and speak clearly (13%), are side effects that patients reported that they do not want to see in a new or future prophylactic migraine medication.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Legacy Keywords
Migraine, migraine prophylaxis, Marci Clark, Neurology Reviews
Legacy Keywords
Migraine, migraine prophylaxis, Marci Clark, Neurology Reviews
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Use ProPublica