21 results on '"Cohen, Joshua M."'
Search Results
2. Impact of fremanezumab on disability outcomes in patients with episodic and chronic migraine: a pooled analysis of phase 3 studies.
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McAllister, Peter, Cohen, Joshua M., Campos, Verena Ramirez, Ning, Xiaoping, Janka, Lindsay, and Barash, Steve
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MIGRAINE prevention , *THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies , *MIGRAINE , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *DISABILITY evaluation , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *STATISTICAL sampling - Abstract
Background: Migraine is the second leading cause of disability worldwide. Although many preventive treatments reduce migraine frequency and severity, it is unclear whether these treatments reduce migraine-related disability in a clinically meaningful way. This pooled analysis evaluated the ability of fremanezumab to reduce migraine-related disability, based on responses and shifts in severity in patient-reported disability outcomes. Methods: This pooled analysis included 3 double-blind phase 3 trials (HALO EM, HALO CM, FOCUS) in which patients with episodic or chronic migraine were randomly assigned 1:1:1 to quarterly or monthly fremanezumab or matched placebo for 12 weeks. Migraine-related disability was assessed using the 6-item Headache Impact Test (HIT-6) and Migraine Disability Assessment (MIDAS) questionnaires. A clinically meaningful improvement in disability was defined per American Headache Society guidelines: for HIT-6, a ≥ 5-point reduction; for MIDAS, a ≥ 5-point reduction when baseline score was 11 to 20 or ≥ 30% reduction when baseline score was > 20. Proportions of patients who demonstrated shifts in severity for each outcome were also evaluated. Results: For patients with baseline MIDAS scores of 11 to 20 (n = 234), significantly higher proportions achieved 5-point reductions from baseline in MIDAS scores with fremanezumab (quarterly, 71%; monthly, 70%) compared with placebo (49%; both P ≤ 0.01). For patients with baseline MIDAS scores of > 20 (n = 1266), proportions achieving ≥30% reduction from baseline in MIDAS scores were also significantly higher with fremanezumab (quarterly, 69%; monthly, 79%) compared with placebo (58%; both P < 0.001). For HIT-6 scores, proportions of patients achieving 5-point reductions from baseline were significantly higher with fremanezumab (quarterly, 53%; monthly, 55%) compared with placebo (39%; both P < 0.0001). Proportions of patients with shifts of 1 to 3 grades down in MIDAS or HIT-6 disability severity were significantly greater with quarterly and monthly fremanezumab compared with placebo (all P < 0.0001). Conclusion: Fremanezumab demonstrated clinically meaningful improvements in disability severity in this pooled analysis. Trial registrations: HALO CM, NCT02621931; HALO EM, NCT02629861; FOCUS, NCT03308968. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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3. Reducing the Burden of Migraine: Safety and Efficacy of CGRP Pathway-Targeted Preventive Treatments.
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Nissan, George R., Kim, Richard, Cohen, Joshua M., Seminerio, Michael J., Krasenbaum, Lynda J., Carr, Karen, and Martin, Vincent
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CALCITONIN gene-related peptide ,MIGRAINE ,MONOCLONAL antibodies ,NEUROLOGICAL disorders ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Migraine is a highly disabling and often chronic neurological disease that affects more than one billion people globally. Preventive migraine treatment is recommended for individuals who have frequent and/or disabling attacks; however, many of the medications used for migraine prevention (e.g., antiepileptics, antidepressants, antihypertensives) were not specifically developed for migraine, and often have limited efficacy or poor tolerability. Four monoclonal antibodies targeting the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) pathway, which is believed to play a crucial role in the pathophysiology of migraine, have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the preventive treatment of migraine in adults. All four migraine-specific treatments have demonstrated efficacy based on reductions in monthly days with migraine for patients with both episodic and chronic migraine, including those with comorbidities. They have also demonstrated favorable safety and tolerability profiles. Based on these accounts, CGRP pathway-targeted monoclonal antibodies have the potential to revolutionize preventive treatment for patients with migraine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Efficacy and quality‐of‐life improvements with fremanezumab treatment in patients with difficult‐to‐treat migraine with associated neurological dysfunction.
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Lampl, Christian, Rapoport, Alan M., Cohen, Joshua M., Barash, Steve, Ramirez Campos, Verena, Seminerio, Michael J., Ning, Xiaoping, and Silberstein, Stephen D.
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MIGRAINE ,QUALITY of life ,IMPACT testing ,PEPTIDES ,MONOCLONAL antibodies ,NEURAL stimulation - Abstract
Background and purpose: Fremanezumab, a fully humanized monoclonal antibody (IgG2Δa) that selectively targets calcitonin‐gene‐related peptide, has demonstrated efficacy as a preventive treatment for adults with episodic migraine or chronic migraine and inadequate response to two to four prior preventive treatment classes in the phase 3b FOCUS study. In this post hoc analysis, efficacy and effects on quality‐of‐life outcomes for fremanezumab were evaluated in subgroups of patients with and without aura or similar neurological symptoms, here referred to as migraine with or without associated neurological dysfunction. Methods: In the FOCUS study, 838 patients were randomized (1:1:1) to quarterly fremanezumab, monthly fremanezumab or matched placebo for 12 weeks of double‐blind treatment. For this post hoc analysis, subgroups of patients with migraine with and without associated neurological dysfunction at baseline were identified based on patient response to questions about symptoms. Results: In patients with migraine with associated neurological dysfunction at baseline, fremanezumab significantly reduced monthly average days with neurological symptoms (quarterly, −1.7 days; monthly, −1.8 days) compared to placebo (−0.5 days; both p ≤ 0.01). In comparison with placebo, both dosing regimens of fremanezumab yielded greater reductions in monthly migraine days over 12 weeks (p < 0.0001) and improvements in Headache Impact Test 6 and Migraine‐Specific Quality of Life scores over the last 4 weeks (p < 0.05), regardless of neurological dysfunction at baseline. Conclusions: Fremanezumab reduced days with neurological symptoms, effectively prevented migraine, and improved quality of life in patients with migraine with associated neurological dysfunction, including those with previous inadequate response to two to four migraine preventive medication classes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Real-world effectiveness of fremanezumab in migraine patients initiating treatment in the United States: results from a retrospective chart study.
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Driessen, Maurice T., Cohen, Joshua M., Patterson-Lomba, Oscar, Thompson, Stephen F., Seminerio, Michael, Carr, Karen, Totev, Todor I., Sun, Rochelle, Yim, Erica, Mu, Fan, and Ayyagari, Rajeev
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THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies , *ACQUISITION of data methodology , *MIGRAINE , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *MEDICAL records - Abstract
Background: The efficacy and tolerability of fremanezumab, a fully humanized monoclonal antibody (IgG2Δa) that selectively targets calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and is approved for the preventive treatment of migraine in adults, have been demonstrated in randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials. Real-world data can further support those clinical trial data and demonstrate the full clinical benefits of fremanezumab. This chart review assessed the effectiveness of fremanezumab for improving clinical outcomes in adult patients with migraine treated according to real-world clinical practice. Methods: This retrospective, panel-based, online physician chart review study used electronic case report forms with US physicians. Patient inclusion criteria were a physician diagnosis of migraine, fremanezumab treatment initiation at ≥ 18 years of age after US Food and Drug Administration approval, ≥ 1 dose of fremanezumab treatment, and ≥ 2 assessments of monthly migraine days (MMD; 1 within 30 days before treatment initiation and ≥ 1 after initiation). Changes from baseline in MMD, monthly headache days (MHD), and Migraine Disability Assessment (MIDAS) and 6-item Headache Impact Test (HIT-6) scores were assessed over 6 months. These endpoints were evaluated in the overall population and subgroups divided by dosing schedule and number of prior migraine preventive treatment failures. Results: This study included data from 421 clinicians and 1003 patients. Mean age at fremanezumab initiation was 39.7 years, and most patients were female (75.8%). In the overall population, mean baseline MMD and MHD were 12.7 and 14.0, respectively. Mean (percent) reductions from baseline in MMD and MHD, respectively, were − 4.6 (36.2%) and − 4.7 (33.6%) at Month 1, − 6.7 (52.8%) and − 6.8 (48.6%) at Month 3, and − 9.2 (72.4%) and − 9.8 (70.0%) at Month 6. Mean (percent) reductions from baseline in MIDAS and HIT-6 scores also increased over the 6-month study period, from − 6.2 (21.6%) and − 8.4 (14.0%) at Month 1 to − 18.1 (63.1%) and − 16.2 (27.0%) at Month 6, respectively. Improvements in these outcomes over 6 months were observed across all evaluated subgroups. Conclusions: This real-world study demonstrated effectiveness of fremanezumab treatment for up to 6 months, irrespective of dosing regimen or number of prior migraine preventive treatment failures, reflecting ongoing, clinically meaningful improvements in patient outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Fremanezumab in individuals with chronic migraine who had inadequate response to onabotulinumtoxinA and topiramate or valproic acid.
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Ferrari, Michel D., Zuurbier, Karin W. M., Barash, Steve, Ning, Xiaoping, and Cohen, Joshua M.
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THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies ,BOTULINUM toxin ,DRUG efficacy ,STATISTICS ,MIGRAINE ,CHRONIC diseases ,MONOCLONAL antibodies ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DATA analysis ,TOPIRAMATE ,VALPROIC acid - Abstract
The article presents the discussion on Fremanezumab in individuals with chronic migraine showing inadequate response to onabotulinumtoxin A and topiramate or valproic acid. Topics include Fremanezumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody (IgG2Δa) selectively target calcitonin gene-related peptide; and treatment-by-subgroup interactions being assessed using an analysis of covariance model for the efficacy outcomes.
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- 2022
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7. Impact of age and sex on the efficacy of fremanezumab in patients with difficult-to-treat migraine: results of the randomized, placebo-controlled, phase 3b FOCUS study.
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MaassenVanDenBrink, Antoinette, Terwindt, Gisela M., Cohen, Joshua M., Barash, Steve, Campos, Verena Ramirez, Galic, Maja, Ning, Xiaoping, and Kärppä, Mikko
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THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies ,DRUG efficacy ,SAFETY ,STATISTICS ,FOCUS groups ,AGE distribution ,MIGRAINE ,MONOCLONAL antibodies ,CALCITONIN ,SEX distribution ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,BLIND experiment ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Background: Migraine prevalence is age and sex dependent, predominating in women in early and middle adulthood; however, migraine also represents a substantial burden for men and adults of all ages. Thus, understanding this burden and the efficacy of migraine preventive medications in both sexes and across age groups is critical. The randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, phase 3b FOCUS study demonstrated the safety and efficacy of fremanezumab, a fully humanized monoclonal antibody (IgG2∆a) that selectively targets calcitonin gene-related peptide as a migraine preventive treatment for individuals with migraine and prior inadequate response to 2 to 4 migraine preventive medication classes. Here, we assessed the efficacy of fremanezumab in participants from FOCUS subgrouped by age (18–45 years and > 45 years) and sex. Methods: In the FOCUS study, eligible participants were randomized (1:1:1) to 12 weeks of double-blind treatment with quarterly fremanezumab, monthly fremanezumab, or matched monthly placebo. In this post hoc analysis, we evaluated changes from baseline in monthly migraine days (primary endpoint of FOCUS) and other secondary and exploratory efficacy outcomes in prespecified age (18–45 and > 45 years) and sex subgroups. Results: The modified intention-to-treat population (received ≥ 1 dose of study drug and had ≥ 10 days of postbaseline efficacy assessments for the primary endpoint) totaled 837 participants (18–45 years, n = 373; > 45 years, n = 464; male, n = 138; female, n = 699). Consistent reductions in monthly average number of migraine days during 12 weeks were observed, regardless of age (18–45 years: quarterly fremanezumab, − 4.1 days; monthly fremanezumab, − 4.7 days; placebo, − 0.9 days; P < 0.001; > 45 years: quarterly fremanezumab, − 3.6 days; monthly fremanezumab, − 3.7 days; placebo, − 0.3 days; P < 0.001) and sex (male: quarterly fremanezumab, − 4.1 days; monthly fremanezumab, − 4.6 days; placebo, − 0.3 days; P < 0.001; female: quarterly fremanezumab, − 3.6 days; monthly fremanezumab, − 3.9 days; placebo, − 0.6 days; P < 0.001). Fremanezumab also reduced monthly headache days of at least moderate severity, monthly days of acute medication use, and improved Migraine Disability Assessment scores across subgroups. Conclusions: These results demonstrate the efficacy of fremanezumab in patients with difficult-to-treat migraine for reducing migraine and headache days, acute medication use, and disability, regardless of age or sex. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT03308968 (FOCUS), registered October 13, 2017. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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8. Efficacy and safety of fremanezumab in clinical trial participants aged ≥60 years with episodic or chronic migraine: pooled results from 3 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 studies.
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Nahas, Stephanie J., Naegel, Steffen, Cohen, Joshua M., Ning, Xiaoping, Janka, Lindsay, Campos, Verena Ramirez, Krasenbaum, Lynda J., Holle-Lee, Dagny, Kudrow, David, and Lampl, Christian
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MIGRAINE prevention ,THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies ,DRUG efficacy ,CLINICAL trials ,HUMAN research subjects ,MONOCLONAL antibodies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,PATIENT safety ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: Although migraine is less common in older people, preventive treatment of migraine in these individuals may be more challenging due to the presence of multiple comorbidities and polypharmacy. Additionally, evidence for migraine treatment efficacy, safety, and tolerability is limited in this population. We evaluated efficacy, safety, and tolerability of fremanezumab, a fully humanized monoclonal antibody (IgG2Δa) that selectively targets calcitonin gene–related peptide (CGRP), in clinical trial participants aged ≥60 years with episodic migraine (EM) or chronic migraine (CM). Methods: This analysis included data from 3 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 studies: the HALO EM study, HALO CM study, and FOCUS study in participants with EM or CM and prior inadequate response to 2–4 migraine preventive medication classes. Participants in all studies were randomized 1:1:1 to receive 12 weeks of subcutaneous treatment with quarterly fremanezumab (Months 1/2/3: EM/CM, 675 mg/placebo/placebo), monthly fremanezumab (Months 1/2/3: EM, 225 mg/225 mg/225 mg; CM, 675 mg/225 mg/225 mg), or matched monthly placebo. Results: These pooled analyses included 246 participants aged ≥60 years. Reductions in monthly migraine days from baseline over 12 weeks were significantly greater with fremanezumab (least-squares mean change from baseline [standard error]: quarterly fremanezumab, − 4.3 [0.59]; monthly fremanezumab, − 4.6 [0.54]) versus placebo (placebo, − 2.3 [0.57]; both P < 0.01 vs placebo). As early as Week 1, significant reductions from baseline in weekly migraine days were observed with fremanezumab versus placebo (both P < 0.01). With fremanezumab treatment versus placebo, a significantly higher proportion of participants achieved ≥50% reduction in monthly migraine days, and significant improvements in disability and quality-of-life outcomes were observed (P < 0.05). Proportions of participants experiencing serious adverse events and adverse events leading to discontinuation were low and similar in the fremanezumab and placebo groups. Efficacy and safety results were comparable to the overall pooled population (N = 2843). Conclusions: This pooled subgroup analysis demonstrates that fremanezumab treatment is efficacious and well-tolerated over 12 weeks in participants aged ≥60 years with EM or CM. These data may help healthcare providers with clinical decision making and preventive treatment selection for older patients with migraine. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifiers: HALO CM: NCT02621931; HALO EM: NCT02629861; FOCUS: NCT03308968. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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9. Fremanezumab for the Preventive Treatment of Migraine: Subgroup Analysis by Number of Prior Preventive Treatments with Inadequate Response.
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Pazdera, Ladislav, Cohen, Joshua M, Ning, Xiaoping, Campos, Verena Ramirez, Yang, Ronghua, and Pozo-Rosich, Patricia
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MIGRAINE , *SUBGROUP analysis (Experimental design) , *DRUGS , *TREATMENT failure , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MIGRAINE prevention , *THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *BLIND experiment - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of monthly or quarterly fremanezumab in patients with chronic migraine or episodic migraine and documented inadequate response to 2, 3, or 4 classes of prior migraine preventive medications.Methods: This is an exploratory analysis of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3b trial for patients with chronic migraine or episodic migraine and inadequate response to 2 to 4 prior migraine preventive medication classes randomized (1:1:1) to fremanezumab (quarterly or monthly) or placebo. In this exploratory analysis, changes from baseline in the monthly average number of migraine days during 12 weeks of double-blind treatment and adverse events were evaluated for predefined subgroups of patients by number of prior preventive medication classes with inadequate response.Results: Overall, 414, 265, and 153 patients had inadequate response to 2, 3, and 4 preventive medication classes, respectively. Changes from baseline in monthly average migraine days during 12 weeks were significantly greater with fremanezumab compared with placebo for patients with documented inadequate response to 2 classes (least-squares mean difference vs placebo [95% confidence interval]: quarterly, -2.9 [-3.83, -1.98]; monthly, -3.7 [-4.63, -2.75]), 3 classes (quarterly, -3.3 [-4.65, -1.95]; monthly, -3.0 [-4.25, -1.66]), and 4 classes (quarterly, -5.3 [-7.38, -3.22]; monthly, -5.4 [-7.35, -3.48]) of migraine preventive medications (all p < 0.001). No significant treatment-by-subgroup interactions were observed for any outcome (p interaction > 0.20 for all). Adverse events were comparable for placebo and fremanezumab.Conclusion: Significant improvements in efficacy were observed with fremanezumab compared with placebo, even in patients who had previously experienced inadequate response to 4 different classes of migraine preventive medications.ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03308968. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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10. Efficacy and safety of fremanezumab in patients with episodic and chronic migraine with documented inadequate response to 2 to 4 classes of migraine preventive medications over 6 months of treatment in the phase 3b FOCUS study.
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Ashina, Messoud, Cohen, Joshua M., Galic, Maja, Campos, Verena Ramirez, Barash, Steve, Ning, Xiaoping, Kessler, Yoel, Janka, Lindsay, and Diener, Hans-Christoph
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MIGRAINE prevention , *THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies , *DRUG efficacy , *RESEARCH , *HYPERACUSIS , *MIGRAINE , *TIME , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *TREATMENT duration , *MEDICAL cooperation , *CALCITONIN , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *PLACEBOS , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *BLIND experiment , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *STATISTICAL sampling , *VISION disorders , *PEPTIDES - Abstract
Background: Fremanezumab, a fully humanized monoclonal antibody (IgG2Δa) selectively targets the calcitonin gene-related peptide and has proven efficacy for the preventive treatment of migraine. In this study, we evaluated the long-term efficacy, safety, and tolerability of monthly and quarterly fremanezumab. Methods: Episodic migraine and chronic migraine patients completing the 12-week double-blind period of the FOCUS trial entered the 12-week open-label extension and received 3 monthly doses of fremanezumab (225 mg). Changes from baseline in monthly migraine days, monthly headache days of at least moderate severity, days of acute headache medication use, days with photophobia/phonophobia, days with nausea or vomiting, disability scores, and proportion of patients achieving a ≥50% or ≥75% reduction in monthly migraine days were evaluated. Results: Of the 807 patients who completed the 12-week double-blind treatment period and entered the open-label extension, 772 patients completed the study. In the placebo, quarterly fremanezumab, and monthly fremanezumab dosing regimens, respectively, patients had fewer average monthly migraine days (mean [standard deviation] change from baseline: − 4.7 [5.4]; − 5.1 [4.7]; − 5.5 [5.0]), monthly headache days of at least moderate severity (− 4.5 [5.0]; − 4.8 [4.5]; − 5.2 [4.9]), days per month of acute headache medication use (− 4.3 [5.2]; − 4.9 [4.6]; − 4.8 [4.9]), days with photophobia/phonophobia (− 3.1 [5.3]; − 3.4 [5.3]; − 4.0 [5.2]), and days with nausea or vomiting (− 2.3 [4.6]; − 3.1 [4.5]; − 3.0 [4.4]). During the 12-week open-label extension, 38%, 45%, and 46% of patients, respectively, achieved a ≥50% reduction and 16%, 15%, and 20%, respectively, achieved a ≥75% reduction in monthly migraine days. Disability scores were substantially improved in all 3 treatment groups. There were low rates of adverse events leading to discontinuation (<1%). Conclusion: Fremanezumab demonstrated sustained efficacy up to 6 months and was well tolerated in patients with episodic migraine or chronic migraine and documented inadequate response to multiple migraine preventive medication classes. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03308968 (FOCUS). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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11. Reduction in the severity and duration of headache following fremanezumab treatment in patients with episodic and chronic migraine.
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Ashina, Messoud, Cohen, Joshua M., Gandhi, Sanjay K., and Du, Evelyn
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THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies , *RESEARCH , *STATISTICS , *CHRONIC diseases , *MIGRAINE , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *SEVERITY of illness index , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DISEASE duration , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analysis , *SUBCUTANEOUS injections , *EVALUATION - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the impact of fremanezumab on the severity and duration of remaining migraine attacks in patients with chronic migraine (CM) or episodic migraine (EM). Background: Fremanezumab is a fully humanized monoclonal antibody (IgGΔa) that selectively targets calcitonin gene‐related peptide and is efficacious in reducing migraine frequency. Methods: This exploratory post hoc analysis included data from three randomized, double‐blind, 12‐week, phase 3 studies (HALO CM, HALO EM, and FOCUS). In all three studies, patients with CM or EM were randomized 1:1:1 to receive subcutaneous quarterly fremanezumab (month 1/2/3: 675 mg/placebo/placebo), monthly fremanezumab (month 1/2/3: 675 mg [CM], 225 mg [EM]/225 mg/225 mg), or matched monthly placebo. Changes from baseline were evaluated in the proportion of headache days of at least moderate severity, peak severity of headache days, mean monthly headache hours (of any severity and at least moderate severity), and mean headache hours per headache day of any severity. Results: A total of 2843 patients were randomized with 2823 patients included in the efficacy analyses across all studies (HALO CM, N = 1121; HALO EM, N = 865; FOCUS, N = 837). At study baseline, mean (standard deviation [SD]) monthly number of headache days rated moderate or severe in the quarterly fremanezumab, monthly fremanezumab, and placebo groups, respectively, were 13.2 (5.5), 12.8 (5.8), and 13.3 (5.8) in HALO CM; 7.2 (3.1), 6.8 (2.9), and 6.9 (3.1) in HALO EM; and 12.4 (5.8), 12.7 (5.8), and 12.8 (5.9) in FOCUS. Patients experienced significant least‐squares mean (LSM; 95% confidence interval) percent reductions from baseline in monthly number of headache days rated moderate or severe during the 12 weeks: HALO CM, quarterly fremanezumab, 34.5% (−39.8, −29.2) and monthly fremanezumab, 36.2% (−41.4, −31.0) vs. placebo, 19.6% (−20.0, −14.3); HALO EM, quarterly fremanezumab, 40.7% (−47.8, −33.5) and monthly fremanezumab, 43.4% (−50.4, −36.3) vs. placebo, 17.9% (−24.9, −11.0); and FOCUS, quarterly fremanezumab, 36.5% (−41.9, −31.1) and monthly fremanezumab, 38.6% (−44.0, −33.3) vs. placebo, 3.5% (−8.9, 1.8); all p < 0.0001. At study baseline, mean (SD) number of monthly headache hours rated moderate or severe in the quarterly fremanezumab, monthly fremanezumab, and placebo groups, respectively, were 66.4 (58.8), 68.0 (53.9), and 68.5 (57.0) in HALO CM; 33.3 (25.4), 31.7 (23.7), and 31.6 (23.2) in HALO EM; and 59.2 (54.7), 64.3 (65.2), and 65.9 (70.2) in FOCUS. Significant reductions were observed in LSM (standard error) number of monthly headache hours of at least moderate severity: HALO CM, quarterly fremanezumab, 24.4 (2.5) and monthly fremanezumab, 26.4 (2.3) vs. placebo, 14.1 (2.5); HALO EM, quarterly fremanezumab, 14.5 (1.4) and monthly fremanezumab, 15.5 (1.3) vs. placebo, 8.1 (1.3); and FOCUS, quarterly fremanezumab, 16.8 (3.0) and monthly fremanezumab, 18.3 (3.0) vs. placebo, 2.3 (3.0); all p < 0.001. Conclusion: These analyses demonstrated that quarterly or monthly treatment with fremanezumab significantly reduced headache severity and duration in patients with CM or EM, including in patients with documented inadequate response to two to four prior migraine preventive medication classes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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12. Immunogenicity of biologic therapies for migraine: a review of current evidence.
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Cohen, Joshua M., Ning, Xiaoping, Kessler, Yoel, Rasamoelisolo, Michele, Campos, Verena Ramirez, Seminerio, Michael J., Krasenbaum, Lynda J., Shen, Honglue, and Stratton, Jennifer
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DRUG resistance , *IMMUNOGLOBULINS , *MIGRAINE , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *NEUROPEPTIDES - Abstract
Background: Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) targeting the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) pathway have been shown to be effective in migraine prevention. Eptinezumab, erenumab, fremanezumab, and galcanezumb have shown efficacy in clinical trials along with favorable safety and tolerability profiles. Although erenumab is a human mAb and the others have been humanized to varying degrees, they all have the capacity to provoke immune reactions. The present review article aims to discuss the current relationship between mAbs targeting the CGRP pathway (CGRP mAbs) and immunogenicity and their potential clinical implications. Findings: The incidence of patients developing anti-drug antibodies (ADAs), their titer, and clinical significance are highly variable and depend on a variety of different drug and patient factors. Neutralizing ADAs (NAbs) bind to and inhibit or reduce the pharmacologic activity of the biologic drug molecule, whereas non-neutralizing antibodies (Non-NAbs) bind to the biologic drug molecule without affecting pharmacologic activity in an in vitro test, although pharmacokinetics and drug clearance may be affected. A direct comparison of immunogenicity data across clinical trials with different biologics is not possible due to a lack of standardized assays. Several phase 2, phase 3, and long-term studies evaluating CGRP mAbs for migraine prevention have reported immunogenicity data (5 studies each for eptinezumab, erenumab, fremanezumab, and galcanezumab). Across these studies, prevalence of ADAs varied, ranging from < 1% to ~ 18%. Neutralizing ADAs were slightly less common, with a prevalence ranging from 0 to 12%. Adverse events related to ADA formation were rare. Conclusions: As more CGRP mAb studies are conducted and more long-term follow-up data become available, evidence is increasing that immunogenicity rates of biologic therapies for migraine are low, and adverse events related to ADAs are rare. Taken together, these results add to the growing body of evidence for the safety and tolerability of this class of migraine medications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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13. Treatment benefit among migraine patients taking fremanezumab: results from a post hoc responder analysis of two placebo-controlled trials.
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Silberstein, Stephen D., Cohen, Joshua M., Yang, Ronghua, Gandhi, Sanjay K., Du, Evelyn, Jann, Adelene E., and Marmura, Michael J.
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THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies , *MIGRAINE , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *QUALITY of life , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *BLIND experiment , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Monoclonal antibodies targeting the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) pathway, including the fully humanized monoclonal antibody (IgG2Δa) fremanezumab, have demonstrated safety and efficacy for migraine prevention. Clinical trials include responders and nonresponders; efficacy outcomes describe mean values across both groups and thus provide little insight into the clinical benefit in responders. Clinicians and their patients want to understand the extent of clinical improvement in patients who respond. This post hoc analysis of fremanezumab treatment attempts to answer this question: what is the benefit in subjects who responded to treatment during the two, phase 3 HALO clinical trials? Methods: We included subjects with episodic migraine (EM) or chronic migraine (CM) who received fremanezumab quarterly (675 mg/placebo/placebo) or monthly (EM: 225 mg/225 mg/225 mg; CM: 675 mg/225 mg/225 mg) during the 12-week randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled HALO EM and HALO CM clinical trials. EM and CM responders were defined as participants with a reduction of ≥ 2 or ≥ 4 monthly migraine days, respectively. Treatment benefits evaluated included reductions in monthly migraine days, acute headache medication use, and headache-related disability, and changes in health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Results: Overall, 857 participants from the HALO trials were identified as responders (EM: 429 [73.8%]; CM: 428 [56.7%]). Reductions in the monthly average number of migraine days were greater among EM (quarterly: 5.4 days; monthly: 5.5 days) and CM (quarterly: 8.7 days; monthly: 9.1 days) responders compared with the overall population. The proportion of participants achieving ≥ 50% reduction in the average monthly number of migraine days was also greater in responders (EM: quarterly, 59.8%; monthly, 63.7%; CM: quarterly, 52.8%; monthly, 59.0%) than in the overall population. Greater reductions in the average number of days of acute headache medication use, greater reductions in headache-related disability scores, and larger improvements in HRQoL were observed among EM and CM responders compared with the overall populations. Conclusions: Fremanezumab responders achieved clinically meaningful improvements in all outcomes. The magnitude of improvements with fremanezumab across efficacy outcomes was far greater in responders than in the overall trial population, providing insight into expected treatment benefits in participants who respond to fremanezumab in clinical practice. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifiers: NCT02629861 (HALO EM) and NCT02621931 (HALO CM). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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14. Reversion From Chronic Migraine to Episodic Migraine in Patients Treated With Fremanezumab: Post Hoc Analysis From HALO CM Study.
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Lipton, Richard B., Cohen, Joshua M., Bibeau, Kristen, Galic, Maja, Seminerio, Michael J., Ramirez Campos, Verena, Halker Singh, Rashmi B., and Ailani, Jessica
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THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies , *SUBCUTANEOUS injections , *CHRONIC pain , *MIGRAINE , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *PLACEBOS , *STATISTICAL sampling , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *BLIND experiment , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: Migraine preventive medications are used to reduce headache frequency, severity, and duration. In patients with chronic migraine (CM), reversion to episodic migraine (EM) is an important treatment goal. Objective: To evaluate the effect of fremanezumab on the rate of reversion from CM to EM. Methods: This phase 3, randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled, parallel‐group trial included a 28‐day pretreatment period and a 3‐month treatment period. Patients with CM received subcutaneous fremanezumab quarterly (675 mg at baseline) or monthly (675 mg at baseline; 225 mg at Weeks 4 and 8), or placebo. Post hoc analyses evaluated the proportion of patients who reverted from CM to EM, defined as either a reduction to an average of <15 headache days per month during the 3‐month treatment period or a reduction to <15 headache days per month in all 3 months of the treatment period. Results: This analysis included data from 1088 CM patients (quarterly, n = 366; monthly, n = 365; placebo, n = 357). More fremanezumab‐treated patients with CM reverted to EM using either the monthly average number of headache days criteria for reversion (quarterly: 50.5% [185/366], P =.108; monthly: 53.7% [196/365], P =.012; vs placebo: 44.5% [159/357]) or the monthly headache day count at Months 1, 2, and 3 criteria for reversion (quarterly: 31.2% [114/366], P =.008; monthly: 33.7% [123/365], P =.001; vs placebo: 22.4% [80/357]). Patients with CM who reported previous topiramate or onabotulinumtoxinA use, concomitant preventive medication use, or medication overuse were less likely to revert to EM. Conclusions: Fremanezumab may offer the benefit of reversion from CM to EM, based on a reduction in the number of headache days over 3 months of treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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15. No "Wearing‐Off Effect" Seen in Quarterly or Monthly Dosing of Fremanezumab: Subanalysis of a Randomized Long‐Term Study.
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Blumenfeld, Andrew M., Stevanovic, Darko M., Ortega, Mario, Cohen, Joshua M., Seminerio, Michael J., Yang, Ronghua, Jiang, Bo, and Tepper, Stewart J.
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MIGRAINE prevention ,CALCITONIN ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MIGRAINE ,MONOCLONAL antibodies ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICAL sampling ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,BLIND experiment ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate whether quarterly or monthly administration of fremanezumab for migraine prevention exhibits a pattern of decreased efficacy toward the end of the dosing interval (wearing‐off effect). Background: The main goals of migraine preventive treatment are to reduce the frequency, severity, and duration of migraine attacks, and migraine‐associated disability. Wearing‐off refers to the phenomenon whereby clinical symptoms return or worsen before the next dose of a drug is due and has been reported previously with migraine preventive medications. Design and Methods: This was a long‐term, 12‐month, multicenter, randomized, double‐blind, parallel‐group phase 3 study (NCT02638103) that included chronic (CM) and episodic migraine (EM) patients who rolled over from the 12‐week phase 3 HALO CM (NCT02621931) and EM trials (NCT02629861), as well as an additional subset of 312 new patients. Patients with CM or EM received fremanezumab either monthly or quarterly. In this post hoc analysis, for selected months, the difference in the average number of migraine days between weeks 1‐2 and weeks 3‐4, between weeks 1‐3 and week 4, and between weeks 1‐2 and weeks 11‐12 were calculated. Results: A total of 1890 patients (CM, 1110; EM, 780) were enrolled. At months 3, 6, 9, and 15, there were no substantial differences in mean weekly migraine days between weeks 1‐2 and weeks 3‐4 or between weeks 1‐3 and week 4 with quarterly or monthly fremanezumab in the CM or EM subgroups. There were no substantial increases in mean weekly migraine days between weeks 1‐2 and weeks 11‐12 during the first quarter of treatment (months 1‐3) or the second quarter of treatment (months 4‐6) with quarterly or monthly fremanezumab in the CM or EM subgroups. Across both dosing subgroups in CM and EM patients, the mean weekly number of migraine days decreased substantially (30%‐42%) during the first 2 weeks; decreases in weekly migraine days remained steady during the last 2 weeks of the first quarter, with a similar maintenance of response during the second quarter. Conclusions: This analysis of data from a long‐term, phase 3 study showed that patients receiving quarterly fremanezumab or monthly fremanezumab did not experience a wearing‐off effect toward the end of the dosing interval. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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16. Safety and Tolerability of Fremanezumab for the Prevention of Migraine: A Pooled Analysis of Phases 2b and 3 Clinical Trials.
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Silberstein, Stephen D., McAllister, Peter, Ning, Xiaoping, Faulhaber, Nicola, Lang, Nicole, Yeung, Paul, Schiemann, Jimmy, Aycardi, Ernesto, Cohen, Joshua M., Janka, Lindsay, and Yang, Ronghua
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MIGRAINE prevention ,THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies ,ALLERGIES ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors ,CHRONIC diseases ,DRUG tolerance ,DRUG side effects ,ERYTHEMA ,LIVER function tests ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases ,MONOCLONAL antibodies ,PAIN ,PATIENT safety ,TERMINATION of treatment ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,SEVERITY of illness index ,DIPHENHYDRAMINE - Abstract
Objective: Presentation of pooled analysis of safety data for fremanezumab in patients with chronic (CM) or episodic migraine (EM) from 4 placebo‐controlled phase 2b and phase 3 studies. Background: There is a need for an effective, safe, and well‐tolerated preventive therapy that specifically targets the pathophysiology of migraine to reduce the frequency and severity of migraine attacks in patients with CM or EM who experience 4 or more migraine days per month. Fremanezumab is a fully humanized monoclonal antibody that targets calcitonin gene‐related peptide, a neuropeptide involved in the pathophysiology of migraine. Design/Methods: The 4 placebo‐controlled phases 2b and 3 studies included in this analysis were 16‐week, multicenter, randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled, and parallel‐group studies consisting of a screening visit, a 28‐day pretreatment baseline period, and a 12‐week treatment period with a final evaluation 4 weeks after the final dose of the study drug. Safety endpoints included adverse events (AEs) and immunogenicity. Results: A total of 2566 patients were randomized across all studies (fremanezumab, n = 1704; placebo, n = 862), and 2563 patients were treated. Common reasons for study discontinuation were withdrawal by patient (n = 78), patient lost to follow‐up (n = 60), and AE (n = 50). The mean (standard deviation) duration of exposure was 83.8 (13.6) days for the patients who received fremanezumab, with a total exposure of 390.4 patient years and maximum exposure of 181 days. AEs were mostly mild to moderate in severity and were reported among 48‐69% of patients in all treatment groups, and most were injection site reactions (pain, induration, and erythema). Two deaths occurred (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and intentional overdose of diphenhydramine), both of which were deemed unrelated to study drug by the investigators and sponsor. Cardiovascular adverse events, abnormal liver function tests, and hypersensitivity were uncommon and occurred at similar rates between the placebo and fremanezumab groups. Conclusions: Fremanezumab is a generally safe and well‐tolerated preventive therapy for migraine in adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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17. Fremanezumab as Add-On Treatment for Patients Treated With Other Migraine Preventive Medicines.
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Cohen, Joshua M., Dodick, David W., Yang, Ronghua, Newman, Lawrence C., Li, Thomas, Aycardi, Ernesto, and Bigal, Marcelo E.
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THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies , *SUBCUTANEOUS injections , *DRUG side effects , *MIGRAINE , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *PREVENTIVE health services , *PROBABILITY theory , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Background Fremanezumab (formerly TEV-48125) is a monoclonal antibody directed against calcitonin-gene-related peptide (CGRP), a validated target for migraine preventive therapy. In two previous phase 2 studies, fremanezumab administered once every 28 days for 12 weeks was found to be effective and safe as a preventive treatment for patients suffering from episodic migraine (EM) and chronic migraine (CM). Objective To evaluate the efficacy and safety of fremanezumab as an add-on preventive therapy in individuals with EM and CM who are on stable doses of preventive migraine medications. Methods Two randomized placebo-controlled studies tested once-monthly subcutaneous injections of various dosing regimens of fremanezumab versus placebo in EM and CM. Headache information was captured daily using an electronic headache diary. For these post hoc analyses, data were pooled from patients who were on stable preventive medications and taking fremanezumab doses of 225 mg or 675/225 mg, or placebo. Results The sample consisted of 133 patients, (67 fremanezumab and 66 placebo). Total reduction in migraine days for the duration of the study was 12.4 for fremanezumab and 7.4 for placebo ( P = .0321). There were also decreases in moderate/severe headache days (12.5 vs 7.1, P = .0058), and days using acute medication for headaches relative to placebo (11.6 vs 7.5, P = .0414). Treatment emergent adverse events were generally mild and transient, and no serious adverse events were considered to be treatment-related by the site investigators. Conclusions The findings from these post hoc analyses suggest that fremanezumab is a safe and effective add-on treatment for migraine patients being concomitantly treated with other migraine preventive medications. Trials are registered at NCT02025556 and NCT02021773. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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18. The impact of fremanezumab on medication overuse in patients with chronic migraine: subgroup analysis of the HALO CM study.
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Silberstein, Stephen D., Cohen, Joshua M., Seminerio, Michael J., Yang, Ronghua, Ashina, Sait, and Katsarava, Zaza
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MIGRAINE prevention , *THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies , *CALCITONIN , *COMBINATION drug therapy , *CHRONIC diseases , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DRUG overdose , *GENE expression , *HEADACHE , *MIGRAINE , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *NEUROPEPTIDES , *PLACEBOS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *STATISTICAL sampling , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *SEVERITY of illness index , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: We evaluated the efficacy of fremanezumab, a fully humanized monoclonal antibody that selectively targets calcitonin gene-related peptide, in patients with chronic migraine (CM) with and without medication overuse (MO). Methods: In a 12-week, phase 3 trial, patients with CM were randomized to fremanezumab quarterly (675 mg/placebo/placebo), monthly (675 mg/225 mg/225 mg), or placebo. Post hoc analyses assessed the impact of fremanezumab in patients with and without MO (monthly use of acute headache medication ≥15 days, migraine-specific acute medication ≥10 days, or combination medication ≥10 days) on efficacy outcomes, including headache days of at least moderate severity (HDs), and six-item Headache Impact Test (HIT-6) and Migraine-Specific Quality of Life (MSQoL) questionnaire scores. Results: Of 1130 patients enrolled, 587 (51.9%) had baseline MO. Fremanezumab reduced placebo-adjusted least-squares mean (95% confidence interval) monthly HDs (− 2.2 [− 3.1 to − 1.2] and − 2.7 [− 3.7 to − 1.8]; P < 0.0001) in patients with MO and without MO (quarterly − 1.4 [− 2.3 to − 0.5], P = 0.0026; monthly − 1.4 [− 2.3 to − 0.6], P = 0.0017). Significantly more fremanezumab-treated patients had ≥ 50% reduction in HDs versus placebo, regardless of baseline MO (with: quarterly 70/201 [34.8%], monthly 78/198 [39.4%] vs placebo 26/188 [13.8%]; without: quarterly 71/174 [40.8%], monthly 75/177 [42.4%] vs placebo 41/183 [22.4%]). Fremanezumab improved HIT-6 and MSQoL scores. Significantly more fremanezumab-treated patients reverted to no MO (quarterly 111/201 [55.2%], monthly 120/198 [60.6%]) versus placebo (87/188 [46.3%]). Conclusions: Fremanezumab is effective for prevention of migraine in patients with CM, regardless of MO, and demonstrated a benefit over placebo in reducing MO. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02621931 (HALO CM), registered December 12, 2012. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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19. Physician and patient preferences for dosing options in migraine prevention.
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Cowan, Robert, Cohen, Joshua M., Rosenman, Erik, and Iyer, Ravi
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MIGRAINE prevention , *DRUGS , *DOSAGE forms of drugs , *GENETIC techniques , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *PATIENT compliance , *SURVEYS , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *PHYSICIANS' attitudes - Abstract
Background: Adherence to a therapy, though a key factor for successful treatment, is low among patients with chronic conditions such as migraine. Dose frequency plays a major role in adherence. This study evaluated the impact of having flexible dosing options on acceptance of and adherence to a new migraine preventive therapy class among adults with migraine. Methods: In this observational study, two 20-min online surveys were completed: one by physicians currently treating adult patients with migraine and the other by adults with migraine. Both surveys presented the participants with three scenarios: 1) only monthly, 2) only quarterly, and 3) both dosing options of the new medication are available. Physicians estimated the proportion of their migraine patients who would receive the new medication in each scenario. Patients were asked about their dosing preference when either or both options are available. Respondents were asked to rate the likelihood of their acceptance of and adherence to the therapy. Results: 400 physicians and 417 US adults with migraine completed the surveys. The availability of both dosing options yielded a significant increase in the proportion of patients expected to receive the new medication. The overall proportion of patients favoring monthly dosing (35%) was similar to the proportion favoring quarterly dosing (40%). Among those who preferred monthly dosing (n = 147), a greater proportion indicated they are more likely to fill the prescription (77% vs 56%, P < 0.05) and remain adherent (80% vs 57%, P < 0.05) when only monthly is available versus when only quarterly is available. Similarly, among those who preferred quarterly dosing (n = 166), a greater proportion indicated they are likely to fill (63% vs 55%, P < 0.05) and remain adherent (62% vs 54%, P < 0.05) when only quarterly is available compared with when only monthly is available. Conclusions: Physicians anticipated that the proportion of patients to receive the new medication would increase when both dosing options are available. Patients stated that they are more likely to fill the prescription and adhere to the new therapy when their preferred dosing regimen is available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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20. Safety and tolerability of fremanezumab in patients with episodic and chronic migraine: a pooled analysis of phase 3 studies.
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Diener, Hans Christoph, McAllister, Peter, Jürgens, Tim P, Kessler, Yoel, Ning, Xiaoping, Cohen, Joshua M, Campos, Verena Ramirez, Barash, Steve, and Silberstein, Stephen D
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CALCITONIN gene-related peptide , *MIGRAINE , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors , *MONOCLONAL antibodies - Abstract
Background: Fremanezumab, a fully humanized monoclonal antibody that selectively targets calcitonin gene-related peptide, has demonstrated efficacy for preventive treatment of episodic and chronic migraine. Since calcitonin gene-related peptide is expressed within the cardio- and cerebrovascular system and may have cardioprotective effects, it is critical to understand the cardio- and cerebrovascular safety of fremanezumab. Methods: This was a pooled analysis of three randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3, 12-week trials in which patients with episodic migraine or chronic migraine received quarterly fremanezumab, monthly fremanezumab, or placebo. Incidences of overall and serious adverse events were analyzed. Cardio- and cerebrovascular adverse events (CVAEs) were analyzed in subgroups stratified by cardio- and cerebrovascular medical history, cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs), and use of cardio- and cerebrovascular medications or triptans. Results: Two thousand, eight hundred and forty-two patients were included in the study. Overall (58–65%) and serious adverse events (<1–2%) occurred in similar proportions across fremanezumab and placebo groups. CVAEs were infrequent, regardless of cardio- and cerebrovascular medical history (2–6%). CVAEs occurred in low, similar proportions of patients with CVRFs and those using cardio- and cerebrovascular medications or triptans. No cardio- and cerebrovascular signals were identified. Conclusion: Fremanezumab demonstrated a favorable overall and cardio- and cerebrovascular safety profile in more than 2800 patients with episodic migraine or chronic migraine, regardless of cardio- and cerebrovascular medical history, CVRFs, or medication use. Trial Registrations: NCT02629861 (HALO EM, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02629861), NCT02621931 (HALO CM, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02621931), NCT03308968 (FOCUS, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/ show/NCT03308968) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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21. Fremanezumab versus placebo for migraine prevention in patients with documented failure to up to four migraine preventive medication classes (FOCUS): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3b trial.
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Ferrari, Michel D, Diener, Hans Christoph, Ning, Xiaoping, Galic, Maja, Cohen, Joshua M, Yang, Ronghua, Mueller, Matthias, Ahn, Andrew H, Schwartz, Yael Carmeli, Grozinski-Wolff, Melissa, Janka, Lindsay, and Ashina, Messoud
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CALCITONIN gene-related peptide , *MIGRAINE , *PLACEBOS , *DRUGS , *MIGRAINE prevention , *SUBCUTANEOUS injections , *CLINICAL trials , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MONOCLONAL antibodies , *NEUROPEPTIDES , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *BLIND experiment - Abstract
Background: Antibodies targeting calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) or its receptor have shown efficacy in the prevention of migraine attacks. We investigated the efficacy and tolerability of fremanezumab, a fully humanised CGRP antibody, in patients with migraine who had previously not responded to two to four classes of migraine preventive medications.Methods: The randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, phase 3b FOCUS trial was done at 104 sites (including hospitals, medical centres, research institutes, and group practice clinics) across Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the UK, and the USA. We enrolled participants aged 18-70 years with episodic or chronic migraine who had documented failure to two to four classes of migraine preventive medications in the past 10 years. Failure was defined as no clinically meaningful improvement after at least 3 months of therapy at a stable dose, as per the treating physician's judgment; discontinuation because of adverse events that made treatment intolerable; or treatment contraindicated or unsuitable for the preventive treatment of migraine for the patient. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1:1) by electronic interactive response technology to subcutaneously administered quarterly fremanezumab (month 1, 675 mg; months 2 and 3: placebo), monthly fremanezumab (month 1: 225 mg in episodic migraine and 675 mg in chronic migraine; months 2 and 3: 225 mg in both migraine subgroups), or matched monthly placebo for 12 weeks. The primary outcome was mean change from baseline in the monthly average number of migraine days during the 12-week treatment period. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT03308968, and is now completed.Findings: Between Nov 10, 2017, and July 6, 2018, 838 participants with episodic (329 [39%]) or chronic (509 [61%]) migraine were randomly assigned to placebo (n=279), quarterly fremanezumab (n=276), or monthly fremanezumab (n=283). Reductions from baseline in monthly average migraine days over 12 weeks were greater versus placebo (least-squares mean [LSM] change -0·6 [SE 0·3]) with quarterly fremanezumab (LSM change -3·7 [0·3]; LSM difference vs placebo -3·1 [95% CI -3·8 to -2·4]; p<0·0001) and with monthly fremanezumab (LSM change -4·1 [0·34]; LSM difference vs placebo -3·5 [-4·2 to -2·8]; p<0·0001). Adverse events were similar for placebo and fremanezumab. Serious adverse events were reported in four (1%) of 277 participants with placebo, two (<1%) of 276 with quarterly fremanezumab, and four (1%) of 285 with monthly fremanezumab.Interpretation: Fremanezumab was effective and well tolerated in patients with difficult-to-treat migraine who had previously not responded to up to four classes of migraine preventive medications.Funding: Teva Pharmaceuticals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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