Abstract
Frovatriptan 2.5 mg has been investigated for the treatment of moderate or severe migraine attacks in six placebo-controlled, randomised controlled trials (RCTs). The mean headache relief (a decrease from moderate or severe to none or mild) was 43 % after frovatriptan and 24 % after placebo. The mean therapeutic gain (active minus placebo) was 19 % (95 % confidence interval 16–22 %). In one large comparative RCT, sumatriptan 100 mg was superior to frovatriptan 2.5 mg for headache relief at two hours (47 versus 37 %). In three cross-over RCTs in which the patients treated migraine attacks as early as possible, frovatriptan 2.5 mg was quite similar to zolmitriptan 2.5 mg, rizatriptan 10 mg and almotriptan 12.5 mg for preference – the primary efficacy measure. It is concluded that frovatriptan is not the triptan of first choice in established moderate to severe migraine attacks (based on systematic reviews and one comparative RCT). However, if the patients can treat their migraine attacks at the start of an attack (and are not triptan-resistant), then frovatriptan is a reasonable treatment choice among the triptans.
Publisher
Touch Medical Media, Ltd.
Subject
Clinical Neurology,Neurology
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Transkutane Vagusnervstimulation;Zeitschrift für Epileptologie;2014-01-17