Abstract
Background. The chronic nature of migraine and the reliance on acute treatment constitute the basis of the present long-term, open-label study. Objectives. First, assessment of the tolerability and safety of frovatriptan, 2.5-7.5 mg taken orally over 24 hours, for the acute treatment of migraine, repeatedly over a 12-month period. Second, assessment of the efficacy and tolerability of a second, double-blind dose of 2.5-mg frovatriptan, compared with placebo, for nonresponse at 2 hours after treatment of moderate or severe headache with 2.5-mg frovatriptan. Results. With regard to the first attack treated, 173 (36%) of the 486 subjects in the study did not take a second dose at 2 hours for nonresponse. At 2 hours and 4 hours, these "rapid responders" experienced a decrease in headache intensity from moderate or severe to mild or no pain in 84% and 98%, respectively ("headache response"). Six percent of them experienced recurrence of moderate or severe headache within 24 hours following a response at 4 hours and 12% took rescue medication. The response, measured in terms of median time to "complete migraine relief," was maintained over 30 subsequent migraine attacks, treated from attack 2 onwards over the course of 12 months. Conclusion. Frovatriptan provides a remarkably fast and high headache response in a subgroup of more than one-third of migraineurs, with a very low 24-hour headache recurrence and low rescue medication intake. © 2009 American Academy of Pain Medicine.
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Spierings, E. L. H., Keywood, C., Baggish, J., Blumenthal, H. J., Cady, R. K., Cook, D. H., … Tindel, J. (2009). Rapid responders to frovatriptan in acute migraine treatment: Results from a long-term, open-label study. Pain Medicine, 10(4), 633–638. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1526-4637.2009.00618.x
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