No wearing-off effect of erenumab or fremanezumab for chronic migraine prevention: a single-center, real-world, observational study

Author:

Florescu Anna Maria,Lannov Lærke Vig,Younis Samaira1ORCID,Cullum Christopher Kjaer,Chaudhry Basit Ali1,Do Thien Phu1,Amin Faisal Mohammad

Affiliation:

1. Danish Headache Center, Department of Neurology, Copenhagen University Hospital – Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark

Abstract

Background The present study investigates the wearing-off effect in adults with chronic migraine treated with erenumab or fremanezumab. Methods This real-world observational study was based on pre-collected headache diaries from chronic migraine patients in treatment with either monthly injections of 140 mg of erenumab or 225 mg of fremanezumab. Consistent wearing-off was defined as an increase of ≥2 weekly migraine days in the last week compared to the second week over two consecutive 4-week treatment periods. The primary endpoint was wearing-off in the total population. The secondary endpoints were difference in wearing-off in (i) a subgroup of patients treated with erenumab and fremanezumab and (ii) consistent wearing-off in patients with a ≥30% reduction in monthly migraine days, compared to baseline, in the two consecutive treatment months. Results In total, 100 patients (erenumab: n = 60, fremanezumab: n = 40) were included. Sixty-two out of 100 (62%) patients had consistent ≥30% treatment response on antibody therapy in both months (erenumab: n = 36, fremanezumab: n = 26). There was no consistent wearing-off over the two consecutive months from week 2 to week 4 (3.04%, p = 0.558). There was no wearing-off within the erenumab ( p = 0.194) or the fremanezumab ( p = 0.581) groups. Among the ≥30% treatment responders, there was no consistent wearing-off over the two consecutive months (2.6%, p = 0.573). Conclusions There was no wearing-off in treatment responders, which is in alignment with premarketing data from placebo-controlled phase III studies. These data suggest that patients should be informed upfront that no wearing-off effect is expected because anxiety for attacks at the end of the month per se may generate migraine attacks.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Medicine

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