EN | UA
EN | UA

Help Support

Back

Functional benefits of atogepant across episodic and chronic migraine

Migraine Migraine
Migraine Migraine

The ADVANCE, ELEVATE, and PROGRESS studies were phase 3, randomized trials conducted over 12 weeks.

See All

Key take away

Atogepant (60 mg) significantly improves activity-related functioning as early as week 1 across episodic and chronic migraine populations.

Background

The ADVANCE, ELEVATE, and PROGRESS studies were phase 3, randomized trials conducted over 12 weeks. These trials incorporated adults with episodic migraine (EM), EM with inadequate response to 2–4 previous oral preventive therapies, and chronic migraine (CM), respectively. This study was carried out to explore atogepant's impact on daily functioning in patients with episodic migraine and chronic migraine across these three trials.

 

Method

In this post-hoc analysis, the percentage change from baseline in average scores for each Activity Impairment in Migraine-Diary (AIM-D) item at weeks 1–4 was calculated in participants receiving atogepant 60 mg once daily compared to those on placebo. Modified intent-to-treat sample sizes were: ADVANCE (Atogepant: n=222; Placebo: n=214), ELEVATE (Atogepant: n=151; Placebo: n=154), and PROGRESS (Atogepant: n=256; Placebo: n=246).

Result

In week 1, subjects receiving atogepant in the ADVANCE trial exhibited greater percentage reductions in all AIM-D items (range: 46.9%–54.8%) when compared to placebo (17.2%–27.3%), with 10 of 11 items reaching nominal significance. Similarly, in ELEVATE, all AIM-D items improved more with atogepant (47.8%–57.7%) than placebo (12.1%–20.2%), with all differences nominally significant. In PROGRESS, atogepant yielded larger improvements across all items (31.0%–38.5%) than placebo (13.8%–23.4%), with nominal significance in 10 of 11 items. These improvements were sustained throughout weeks 2–4.

Conclusion

Atogepant treatment resulted in greater early functional improvements, as indicated by higher percentage reductions in AIM-D item scores as early as week 1, compared to placebo.

Source:

Neurology

Article:

Impact of Atogepant on Daily Functioning in Patients with Episodic Migraine and Chronic Migraine: Activity Impairment in Migraine-Diary (AIM-D) Item-Level Analysis (P12-12.004)

Authors:

Richard B. Lipton et al.

Comments (0)

You want to delete this comment? Please mention comment Invalid Text Content Text Content cannot me more than 1000 Something Went Wrong Cancel Confirm Confirm Delete Hide Replies View Replies View Replies en ru
Try: