Rizatriptan 10-mg wafer versus usual nontriptan therapy for migraine: analysis of return to function and patient preference
- PMID: 16178944
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1526-4610.2005.00237.x
Rizatriptan 10-mg wafer versus usual nontriptan therapy for migraine: analysis of return to function and patient preference
Abstract
Background: More than half of patients with migraine suffer moderate to severe functional disability during migraine attacks.
Objective: To compare effects on functional disability at 2 hours after treating a migraine with rizatriptan 10-mg wafer versus usual nontriptan therapy for triptan-naïve patients with migraine.
Design: Open-label, prospective, two-attack study conducted at 111 neurology clinics.
Methods: Adult patients with migraine treated two migraine attacks, the first with their usual nontriptan therapy (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, 57%; analgesics, 27%; or ergot derivatives, 16%) and the second with rizatriptan 10-mg wafer. Patients recorded pain intensity and functional disability at the start, and functional disability at 2 hours, as well as the time of return to normal function.
Results: A total of 1353 patients, 76% of them female, completed the study and were considered evaluable. During first and second migraine attacks, 55% and 63% of patients, respectively, reported severe disability or requiring bed rest. At 2 hours after treatment, the likelihood of experiencing any disability was more than five times greater after usual nontriptan therapy than after rizatriptan (odds ratio, 5.68; 95% confidence interval (CI), 4.66 to 6.94; P < .001). Rizatriptan was twice as likely to return patients to normal function than usual nontriptan therapy after adjusting for confounding factors (adjusted hazard ratio, 2.08; 95% CI, 1.92 to 2.25; P < .001). Assessed over all time points up to 6 hours, the speed of return to normal function was 52% faster after rizatriptan therapy (P < .001). Significantly more patients preferred rizatriptan than usual nontriptan therapy (78.8% vs. 21.2%; P < .001). The most common reasons cited for preference for rizatriptan were faster relief of headache pain and faster return to normal function.
Conclusions: Patients in this study were more likely to experience a return to normal function at 2 hours after receiving rizatriptan than after their usual nontriptan therapy for migraine. The results of this study, using patient-oriented, clinically relevant endpoints such as functional disability and preference, will help to guide practitioners in making recommendations for acute migraine treatment.
Comment in
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How effectively do rizatriptan and nontriptan drugs restore functional ability after acute migraine?Nat Clin Pract Neurol. 2006 Apr;2(4):182-3. doi: 10.1038/ncpneuro0151. Nat Clin Pract Neurol. 2006. PMID: 16932546 No abstract available.
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