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Real-world effectiveness of erenumab in Japanese patients with migraine. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on the effectiveness of erenumab in treating migraine patients in Asia, particularly those with a history of multiple treatment failures.
  • Approximately 36% to 63% of patients showed a significant response (≥30% reduction in migraine days) at various points within 6 months, with 85% achieving this response cumulatively.
  • The results suggested that evaluating treatment efficacy may require at least 4-6 months, especially for patients switching from other similar medications.

Article Abstract

Background: Real-world evidence of erenumab effectiveness in migraine patients in Asia with various comorbidities and multiple previous medication failures is still limited.

Methods: A 6-month single-center cohort study of 45 patients with episodic or chronic migraine (CM) treated with erenumab was conducted. In the cohort, 60.0% were switching from other calcitonin gene-related peptide monoclonal antibodies (CGRP mAbs), and 66.7% had ≥4 prophylaxis failures. The change in monthly migraine days (MMDs) from baseline and percentages of responders after treatment were calculated. Weekly migraine days (WMDs) were obtained at baseline and at months 1, 2 and 3 and were compared between weeks 2 and 4.

Results: In total, 36%, 47%, and 63% of patients had a ≥30% response at 1, 3, and 6 months, respectively. The cumulative percentage of patients achieving a ≥30% response over 6 months was 85%. Early responders (average ≥ 30% response at 1-3 months) accounted for 37.8%, 55.6%, and 25.9% of the total, CGRP mAb-naïve, and CGRP mAb-switching groups, respectively. Late responders (average < 30% response at 1-3 months and average ≥ 30% response at 4-6 months) accounted for 46.4%, 37.5%, and 58.8% of nonearly responders in the total, CGRP mAb-naïve, and CGRP mAb-switching groups, respectively. Mild adverse reactions were observed in 5 patients (11.1%). Wearing-off, defined as an increase in the number of WMDs ≥2 between week 2 and week 4, was observed in 2.4-12.5% at months 1-3.

Conclusion: Erenumab was effective in migraine patients. At least 4-6 months may be preferable for efficacy evaluation in patients switching to erenumab from other CGRP mAbs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10900787PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e26568DOI Listing

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