Efficacy and safety of external trigeminal neurostimulation in the prevention of chronic migraine: An open-label trial

Author:

Birlea Marius1,Penning Sophie2,Callahan Kyle1,Schoenen Jean3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO, USA

2. Department of Research and Development, CEFALY Technology, Seraing, Belgium

3. Headache Research Unit, Citadelle Hospital, University of Liege, Liege, Belgium

Abstract

Objective: This trial explored the therapeutic utility and safety of external trigeminal neurostimulation (eTNS) as a preventive treatment in patients suffering from chronic migraine (CM). Methods: It was a monocenter, prospective, open-label, pilot trial conducted at the University of Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus (Aurora, CO, USA). Participants were adult patients with a history of CM meeting International Classification of Headache Disorder-3 beta (2013) diagnostic criteria with or without medication overuse. After a 1-month baseline period, the patients still fulfilling the inclusion criteria applied at least one daily 20-min session of eTNS for 3 months. Primary outcomes were mean monthly changes in frequency of headache days and in overall acute headache medication intake. Results: Eighty patients were assessed for eligibility, 73 were included in the baseline period after which 58 entered the treatment period and were included in the intention-to-treat analysis. Compared to baseline, frequency of headache days decreased by −3.12 days (−16.21%, p < 0.001) and acute medication intake decreased from 26.33 to 18.22 (−30.81%, p < 0.001) during the third month of treatment. Twenty-six patients reported 47 minor adverse events, of which only 2 were related to the use of the device (skin irritation under the electrode and headache worsening with vertigo). Conclusions: This trial suggests that eTNS is safe and effective as prophylactic treatment for CM and indicates that a randomized sham-controlled trial is worthwhile. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (identifier: NCT02342743).

Funder

Cefaly Technology

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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