首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Cardiovascular outcomes in adults with migraine treated with eptinezumab for migraine prevention: pooled data from four randomized,double-blind,placebo-controlled studies
Authors:Timothy R. Smith  Egilius L. H. Spierings  Roger Cady  Joe Hirman  Anders Ettrup  Vivienne Shen
Affiliation:1.StudyMetrix Research, 3862 Mexico Road, St. Peters, MO 63303 USA ;2.Medvadis Research Corporation, Boston PainCare, Waltham, MA USA ;3.Lundbeck LLC, Deerfield, IL USA ;4.Pacific Northwest Statistical Consulting, Inc., Woodinville, WA USA ;5.H. Lundbeck A/S, Copenhagen, Denmark
Abstract:BackgroundPatients with migraine have an increased relative risk of cardio- and cerebrovascular events, and some migraine treatments may exacerbate this risk. The primary objective of this analysis was to determine whether the rate of cardiovascular adverse events was higher for patients with migraine treated with the migraine-preventive eptinezumab, compared with patients receiving placebo.MethodsCardiovascular outcomes in patients with migraine were pooled across four clinical trials (phase 1b, phase 2, and two phase 3 trials) for use of eptinezumab as a preventive migraine treatment for up to 1 year. In all studies, treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) that occurred after the first dose of study treatment (eptinezumab 100 mg, 300 mg, 1000 mg, or placebo) and vital signs were recorded through study completion.ResultsCardiovascular TEAEs were rare across all four clinical trials, and rates were similar between patients receiving eptinezumab and those receiving placebo. Cardiovascular TEAEs that did occur were mild or moderate in severity; there were no serious adverse events as per FDA definition. Vital signs (systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, and heart rate) were not meaningfully different across treatment groups over the course of 56 weeks, compared to placebo. Treatment with eptinezumab did not result in significant new or changed cardiovascular medications used concomitantly compared to placebo.ConclusionsIn this post hoc analysis of four clinical trials for eptinezumab, doses of 100 mg, 300 mg, and 1000 mg (more than 3 times the highest approved dose) were not associated with clinically relevant changes in vital signs or significant changes in concomitant cardiovascular medication usage, and had low incidences of cardiovascular TEAEs, comparable to placebo.Trial registrationNCT01772524 (Study 2), 01/21/2013; NCT02275117 (Study 5), 10/27/2014; NCT02559895 (PROMISE-1), 09/25/2017; NCT02974153 (PROMISE-2), 11/28/2016Supplementary InformationThe online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s10194-021-01360-1.
Keywords:Eptinezumab   Cardiovascular   CGRP   Migraine
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号