Litcius/Paper detail

Anti-CGRP monoclonal antibodies for migraine prevention: A systematic review and likelihood to help or harm analysis

Konstantina Drellia, Lili Kokoti, Christina Deligianni, Dimitrios Papadopoulos, Dimos D. Mitsikostas

2021Cephalalgia91 citationsDOI

Abstract

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVE: Monoclonal antibodies targeting the calcitonin gene-related peptide pathway (anti-CGRP mAbs) have shown promising efficacy in randomised clinical trials for the prevention of episodic and chronic migraine, but no head-to-head comparisons with established treatments are available. We aimed to examine absolute differences in benefit-risk ratios between anti-CGRP mAbs, topiramate and propranolol for the prevention of episodic migraine and between anti-CGRP mAbs, topiramate and onabotulinumtoxinA for the prevention of chronic migraine using a likelihood to help versus harm analysis. METHODS: ) was used as a measure of risk. Likelihood to help versus harm values - which are the ratios of NNTH:NNTB - were calculated using data from phase 3 randomised clinical trials. RESULTS: All agents tested were more likely to be beneficial than harmful (likelihood to help versus harm > 1) with the exception of topiramate at 200 mg per day for the prevention of episodic migraine. Anti-CGRP mAbs in all tested doses had higher LHH values than propranolol or topiramate for episodic migraine and onabotulinumtoxinA or topiramate for chronic migraine prevention. Fremanezumab had the highest LHH ratio in episodic migraine and galcanezumab in chronic migraine. CONCLUSION: This analysis showed that anti-CGRP mAbs exhibit a more favourable benefit-risk ratio than established treatments for episodic and chronic migraine. Head-to-head studies are needed to confirm these results.

Topics & Concepts

TopiramateMedicineMigraineChronic MigraineDiscontinuationCalcitonin gene-related peptideAdverse effectInternal medicineNumber needed to harmNumber needed to treatRelative riskPsychiatryConfidence intervalEpilepsyReceptorNeuropeptideMigraine and Headache StudiesUrinary Bladder and Prostate ResearchPain Mechanisms and Treatments