Lasmiditan is an effective acute treatment for migraine: A phase 3 randomized study

Bernice Kuca, Stephen D Silberstein, Linda Wietecha, Paul H Berg, Gregory Dozier, Richard B Lipton, COL MIG-301 Study Group, Michael Adams, Christopher Alftine, Mohammed Allaw, Lawrence Allen, Madhavi Ampajwala, Ladan Bakhtari, Kala Bhasker, David Bird, David Bolshoun, Judith Brown, Paul Brownstone, Tami Bruce, Dina Burke, Rita Chuang, Rickie Conrady, Bethany Davis, Cedrice Davis, Mark Dawson, Donna Desantis, Holly Dushkin, William Ellison, John Ervin, Beal Essink, Ibrahim Fakhouri, Thomas Fiel, William Fitzgibbons, David Francyk, Harry Geisberg, Jeff Geohas, Son Giep, Richard Glover, Narendra Godbole, William Grainger, Carl Griffin, Steven Halpern, Michael Han, Louis Hiotis, Cynthia Huffman, Matthew Hummel, Donald Hurley, Anthony Inzerello, Ted Jagielo, William Jennings, Scott Kaiser, Jennifer Kay, Ammar Khalifa, William Kirby, Jeffrey Klein, Tracy Klein, James Kopp, Larry Kotek, Gary Korff, Mark Kutner, Robert Lending, Joseph Lentino, Thomas Lenzmeier, David Lesch, Peter Levins, Matthew Lewis, Adam Lowy, Charles Lunn, Kelli Maw, Brock McConnehey, Vishaal Mehra, Praful Mehta, James Meli, Lubna Mirza, Clifford Molin, Robert Molpus, Linda Murray, Michael Noss, Mikhail Palatnik, Frank Rauzi, Naveed Razzaque, Michelle Reynolds, Robert Riesenberg, Ernie Riffer, Ana Rodriguez, Daniel Schlosser, Douglas Schumacher, Randall Severance, Gerald Shockey, Richard Singer, William Smith, Jeffrey Stewart, Arkadiy Stolyar, Albert Tejada, Leslie Tharenos, John Titus, Mark Turner, Merle Turner, Aggy Vallanat, Sunil Verma, Sarah Vollbracht, Kerri Wilks, Hayes Williams, Wesley Williams, Thomas Wolf, Bernice Kuca, Stephen D Silberstein, Linda Wietecha, Paul H Berg, Gregory Dozier, Richard B Lipton, COL MIG-301 Study Group, Michael Adams, Christopher Alftine, Mohammed Allaw, Lawrence Allen, Madhavi Ampajwala, Ladan Bakhtari, Kala Bhasker, David Bird, David Bolshoun, Judith Brown, Paul Brownstone, Tami Bruce, Dina Burke, Rita Chuang, Rickie Conrady, Bethany Davis, Cedrice Davis, Mark Dawson, Donna Desantis, Holly Dushkin, William Ellison, John Ervin, Beal Essink, Ibrahim Fakhouri, Thomas Fiel, William Fitzgibbons, David Francyk, Harry Geisberg, Jeff Geohas, Son Giep, Richard Glover, Narendra Godbole, William Grainger, Carl Griffin, Steven Halpern, Michael Han, Louis Hiotis, Cynthia Huffman, Matthew Hummel, Donald Hurley, Anthony Inzerello, Ted Jagielo, William Jennings, Scott Kaiser, Jennifer Kay, Ammar Khalifa, William Kirby, Jeffrey Klein, Tracy Klein, James Kopp, Larry Kotek, Gary Korff, Mark Kutner, Robert Lending, Joseph Lentino, Thomas Lenzmeier, David Lesch, Peter Levins, Matthew Lewis, Adam Lowy, Charles Lunn, Kelli Maw, Brock McConnehey, Vishaal Mehra, Praful Mehta, James Meli, Lubna Mirza, Clifford Molin, Robert Molpus, Linda Murray, Michael Noss, Mikhail Palatnik, Frank Rauzi, Naveed Razzaque, Michelle Reynolds, Robert Riesenberg, Ernie Riffer, Ana Rodriguez, Daniel Schlosser, Douglas Schumacher, Randall Severance, Gerald Shockey, Richard Singer, William Smith, Jeffrey Stewart, Arkadiy Stolyar, Albert Tejada, Leslie Tharenos, John Titus, Mark Turner, Merle Turner, Aggy Vallanat, Sunil Verma, Sarah Vollbracht, Kerri Wilks, Hayes Williams, Wesley Williams, Thomas Wolf

Abstract

Objective: To assess the efficacy and safety of lasmiditan in the acute treatment of migraine.

Methods: Adult patients with migraine were randomized (1:1:1) to a double-blind dose of oral lasmiditan 200 mg, lasmiditan 100 mg, or placebo and were asked to treat their next migraine attack within 4 hours of onset. Over 48 hours after dosing, patients used an electronic diary to record headache pain and the presence of nausea, phonophobia, and photophobia, one of which was designated their most bothersome symptom (MBS).

Results: Of the 1,856 patients who treated an attack, 77.9% had ≥1 cardiovascular risk factors in addition to migraine. Compared with placebo, more patients dosed with lasmiditan 200 mg were free of headache pain at 2 hours after dosing (32.2% vs 15.3%; odds ratio [OR] 2.6, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.0-3.6, p< 0.001), similar to those dosed with lasmiditan 100 mg (28.2%; OR 2.2, 95% CI 1.6-3.0, p< 0.001). Furthermore, compared with those dosed with placebo, more patients dosed with lasmiditan 200 mg (40.7% vs 29.5%; OR 1.6, 95% CI 1.3-2.1, p< 0.001) and lasmiditan 100 mg (40.9%; OR 1.7, 95% CI, 1.3-2.2, p< 0.001) were free of their MBS at 2 hours after dosing. Adverse events were mostly mild or moderate in intensity.

Conclusions: Lasmiditan dosed at 200 and 100 mg was efficacious and well tolerated in the treatment of acute migraine among patients with a high level of cardiovascular risk factors.

Clinicaltrialsgov identifier: NCT02439320.

Classification of evidence: This study provides Class I evidence that for adult patients with migraine, lasmiditan increases the proportion of subjects who are headache pain free at 2 hours after treating a migraine attack.

Copyright © 2018 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Neurology.

Figures

Figure 1. Study flow (first dose)
Figure 1. Study flow (first dose)
ITT = intent-to-treat; L100 = lasmiditan 100 mg; L200 = lasmiditan 200 mg; mITT = modified intent-to-treat. aPatients who were randomized but then deemed ineligible at the telephone confirmation (after completion of all screening evaluations).
Figure 2. Headache pain free, MBS free,…
Figure 2. Headache pain free, MBS free, and headache relief after the first dose
aDefined as a reduction in (A) headache severity from mild (1), moderate (2), or severe (3) at baseline to none (0). bDefined as (B) the absence of the associated symptom of migraine that was identified before dose as the most bothersome symptom (MBS) (nausea, phonophobia, or photophobia). cDefined as (C) a reduction in headache severity from moderate (2) or severe (3) at baseline to mild (1) or none (0) or a reduction in headache severity from mild (1) at baseline to none (0). *p< 0.05, **p< 0.01, ***p ≤ 0.001 vs placebo. ITT = intent-to-treat; mITT = modified intent-to-treat.

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Source: PubMed

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