Migraine Clinical Trial
Official title:
Parenteral Corticosteroids as Adjuvant Therapy for Migraine Headaches
Migraines are a specific type of headache that frequently recur and are very painful. Although there are many medications that are effective against migraines, none of these medications cure 100% of migraines. Another problem with migraines is that although many times they get better after intravenous (IV) treatment in the emergency room (ER), about 1/3 of the time migraines recur the next day. The purpose of this research project is to see if adding a medication called dexamethasone to standard ER therapy will help patients get better quicker and stay pain-free more often than if they receive placebo.
Parenteral Corticosteroids as Adjuvant Therapy for Migraine Headaches:
A. Overview/Aims: Five million Americans present to emergency departments (ED) annually with
headaches [1]. The majority of these patients have migraine headaches [2,3]. Parenteral
medications of proven benefit for acute migraines include the triptans [4], dopamine-receptor
antagonists [5-11], non-steroidals [12], and dihydroergotamine [13]. Although these distinct
classes of medication are often effective for the treatment of acute migraines, their use is
complicated by treatment failures [4,9,14], recurrence of headache [15,16], and side effects
[17], all of which are of concern for patients with migraines [18]. The ideal medication,
which would rapidly alleviate migraine pain without any recurrence of pain or side effects,
has not yet been identified.
The role of corticosteroids in acute migraines is ill-defined. Although used in patients with
intractable migraines, this class of medication is not widely used in typical migraine
attacks. However, limited clinical data suggest that corticosteroids decrease the rate of
recurrent headaches [19-21] and might decrease the pain of an acute attack [22]. Further
research is needed to define the role of corticosteroids in the ED treatment of acute
migraine headaches.
Specific Aim: The specific aim of this study is to determine the efficacy of ten milligrams
of parenteral dexamethasone as adjuvant therapy for the emergency department treatment of
migraine headaches.
Primary Hypothesis: Twenty four hours after medication administration, a greater percentage
of migraine subjects who received dexamethasone will have:
- sustained pain-free headache relief; and
- no headache-related functional impairment when compared to subjects who receive placebo.
Both groups will also receive the standard of care.
Secondary Hypothesis: Two hours after medication administration, a greater percentage of
migraine subjects who received dexamethasone will be headache pain-free, when compared to
subjects who receive placebo.
B. Background and Significance:
Despite standard treatment, a large percentage of emergency migraineurs continue to suffer
from headaches after ED discharge. Recurrent or persistent headaches rated as moderate or
severe in intensity occurred in 14-43% of subjects 24 hours after discharge in ED-based
migraine clinical trials [20,23,24]. In a Canadian population, 45% of headache patients
reported headache-related functional impairment within 24 hours of ED discharge [16].
Some reports indicate that corticosteroids decrease the rate and intensity of recurrent
migraine headaches [19-21]. However, the investigators could not find any corticosteroid
clinical trials using recommended measures and outcomes [25] in a migraine population. To the
best of their knowledge, no controlled clinical trial has tested the efficacy of
corticosteroids as primary migraine-abortive therapy.
Although the pathogenesis of migraine headaches is incompletely understood, a sterile
neurogenic inflammation is felt to be key to the pain generating pathway that occurs in acute
migraines [15]. Corticosteroids theoretically mitigate this inflammation and decrease the
pain and duration of acute migraine attacks.
One dose of intravenous dexamethasone has been well-tolerated in migraineurs [20]. If this
medication proves to have efficacy for migraines, then this would represent a substantial
contribution to headache medicine, an effective tool in the armamentarium of emergency
physicians, and a cheap and safe method to decrease the pain and suffering of ED migraine
patients.
C. Methods:
C1. Overview: This will be a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical research
trial testing the efficacy of intravenous dexamethasone sodium phosphate as adjuvant therapy
for acute migraine headaches. All subjects will receive standard-of-care migraine-abortive
medication for their migraines. In addition, they will receive either ten milligrams of
intravenous dexamethasone sodium phosphate or a comparable amount of placebo. Subjects will
be followed by telephone 24 hours after medication administration.
C2. Study Sites: Study sites will include the emergency departments of Montefiore Medical
Center, Jacobi Medical Center, New York Presbyterian Hospital, St. Luke's Medical Center,
Bellevue Medical Center, and Kings County Medical Center.
C3. Selection of Participants: The attending emergency physician will refer all adult
patients who present with a chief complaint of headache during the regular hours of the data
collectors. Under the supervision of the site investigators, the data collectors will inform
patients about the study and ask for their consent to participate in this study as human
subjects. The data collectors will include in this study any patient who has a migraine
headache as defined by the International Headache Society (IHS-2003 1.1 migraine without
aura; 1.2 migraine with aura). Patients will also be included if they have an IHS probable
migraine (IHS-2003 1.6.1 & 1.6.2) [26] that has lasted between 72 and 168 hours. In other
words, patients will also be included if their headache meets all IHS migraine criteria
except that the duration of the headache has been between 73 and 168 hours. These probable
migraine patients will be included because they represent a substantial subset of ED primary
headache patients (Friedman, et. al., unpublished data) and because the majority of patients
with a disabling probable migraine and a history of similar headaches will respond to
migraine-specific medication [27].
Patients will be excluded if the emergency physician intends to perform a lumbar puncture in
the ED because lumbar puncture has an independent association with 24 hour headache pain
scores. Patients will be excluded for persistent objective focal neurologic deficits, as
determined by the attending physician, for fear of mistaking a stroke for a complicated
migraine, or for signs and symptoms concerning for other causes of malignant secondary
headache such as meningitis, subarachnoid hemorrhage, carotid dissection, or intracranial
mass. Patients will also be excluded for temperatures greater than 100.3 degrees, pregnancy
or lactation, or allergy or intolerance to any of the study medications. Patients can only
enroll once. Patients over the age of 64 will be excluded, for fear of increased risk of
adverse reactions to study medications and increased risk of secondary headaches. Patients
who do not meet enrollment criteria will have basic demographic and headache variables
recorded.
C4. Randomization and Blinding: Randomization is to be done by the research pharmacist at
Montefiore Medical Center in blocks of six using computer generated random number tables
available online. The randomization will be stratified by study site. In an order determined
by the random number tables, the pharmacist will insert medication into vials and place these
vials into sequentially numbered brown paper research bags. The research bags will be
distributed by express courier in batches of six to the investigators at each site. The
research bags will be stored at each site in a locked location accessible to the data
collectors. When a subject has been identified, the contents of each research bag will be
administered by a clinical nurse. Assignment will be known only by the research pharmacist.
However, the assignment will accompany each research bag, sealed in a small manila envelope,
in case a medical emergency mandates that the assignment be revealed.
C5. Measures:
C5a. Categorical Scale: As a primary measure, this trial will use the four point descriptive
scale recommended for use in migraine research [25]. On this scale, subjects are asked to
characterize their migraine pain as "none, mild, moderate or severe".
C5b. Disability Scale: A descriptive categorical scale will be used to characterize the
subject's headache-related disability. On this scale, subjects describe their disability as
"1) none; 2) mildly impaired (having a little bit of difficulty doing what I usually do); 3)
moderately impaired (having a great deal of difficulty doing what I usually do and can only
do very minor activities); or 4) severely impaired (requiring bed rest)" [25].
C5c. Numerical Rating Scale for Pain: An 11-point verbal numerical rating scale for pain will
be a secondary measurement tool for this trial. On this scale, subjects are asked to describe
their pain as a number between zero and ten, with zero being no pain and ten being the worst
pain imaginable. This scale has been shown to perform comparably to a visual analog scale,
while being easier to administer [28].
C6.Outcomes: The primary outcome will be the percentage of subjects who achieve and maintain
a "headache pain free" state. Persistent "headache pain free" is the recommended outcome for
migraine clinical research [25]. Subjects will be considered to have fulfilled the primary
outcome if they achieve a pain free state in the ED and maintain this throughout the 24 hour
period after receiving study medication. The alternate primary outcome will be the number of
subjects who report no headache-related disability for the period of time after ED discharge.
The major secondary outcome will be the percentage of subjects who report a "headache
pain-free" status two hours after medication administration.
Other secondary outcomes include rates of sustained headache relief (moderate or severe pain
becoming and maintaining a level of mild or none), two-hour NRS change
(NRSbaseline-NRS2hours), 24 hour NRS change (NRSbaseline-NRS24hours), need for rescue
medication before two hours, need for analgesic medication after discharge from the ED,
associated symptoms (specifically: weakness, drowsiness, dizziness), unscheduled visits to a
medical provider within 24 hours of medication administration, and the percentage of patients
who answer affirmatively to the question "Do you want to receive the same medication the next
time you come to the ED?"
C7. Data Collection, Data Entry, and Back-Up: Data entry and follow-up of subjects will be
accomplished by taking advantage of the research infrastructure in place at the Department of
Emergency Medicine of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Five full-time research
assistants and one research clerk are funded by the department. The research assistants are
medical technician level, full-time employees who have extensive clinical research experience
and have passed required research ethics courses. These research assistants staff the
Montefiore ED during all operational hours.
The initial data collection process will be performed by the data collectors at each
individual site. These data collectors will be different in each ED, depending on the
resources at the individual ED. At Montefiore and Jacobi, the data collectors are salaried,
trained, technician level employees, who have passed required research ethics courses. The
data collectors will be trained for this particular study by the principal investigator and
site investigators. Their training will include mock patient encounters. The data collectors
will use a standardized data collection instrument to collect baseline information, pain
scores, and side effects in the ED. After the ED data have been obtained, the data collection
instrument will be photocopied and faxed to a dedicated research clerk in the Department of
Emergency Medicine at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. The receiving fax machine is a
private fax machine secured in an office behind two locked doors.
The research clerk will be responsible for obtaining the 24 hour follow-up information. At a
time pre-arranged with the subject prior to the subject's discharge from the ED, the research
clerk will call the subject and obtain 24 hour follow-up information by reading questions off
of the data collection instrument. Twenty-four hour follow-up to be done during non-business
hours will be performed by Montefiore's research assistants, who cover the ED 24 hours a day,
seven days every week. These research assistants will retrieve the faxed data collection
instruments, obtain the follow-up information, and then return the data collection
instruments to the research clerk.
The research clerk will enter all data into SPSS data entry V.11. Completed data collection
instruments will be sent to a second research clerk who will enter the data a second time
into the same SPSS program. After every ten subjects have been entered, data will be backed
up and stored on three different computers on two distinct campuses. Prior to all analyses,
the two data sets will be compared. Discrepancies will be corrected using the initial data
collection instrument as the source. The original version of each data collection instrument
will be kept in a locked cabinet at its original site.
C8. Medications: In addition to study medication or placebo, all subjects will receive
standard migraine abortive therapy. The optimal migraine-abortive/analgesic medication for ED
patients with acute migraine headaches has not yet been defined, so the investigators have
chosen intravenous metoclopramide, an effective, safe, widely-available, and economical
dopamine receptor antagonist, as the migraine treatment for this trial. Parenteral
dopamine-antagonists are recommended for use in the ED29 and are used more commonly than
triptans in the ED setting [1,16]. Metoclopramide has been shown to be at least as effective
as subcutaneous sumatriptan at reducing pain [7,8] with comparable two hour activity
limitations [30]. The investigators will use 20 milligrams of intravenous metoclopramide, a
moderate dose when compared to their previous work [23,30]. In addition to metoclopramide,
each subject will also receive 25mg of diphenhydramine to prevent akathisia and other
extra-pyramidal reactions to the metoclopramide [31]. This combination of metoclopramide and
diphenhydramine is commonly used in the ED setting and does not cause significant drowsiness
or impairment of activities in migraineurs at two hours [30]. The investigators view the
potential anti-migraine effect of diphenhydramine [32] as added benefit for their subjects.
Metoclopramide, diphenhydramine, and the study medication will be placed into a 50cc bag of
normal saline and administered as a slow intravenous drip over twenty minutes.
Subjects who require rescue medication for persistent headache will receive another 20mg of
intravenous metoclopramide. This additional dose of metoclopramide is part of an ED-based
protocol that has demonstrated a high rate of pain relief and patient satisfaction with a
minimum of side effects [23,30].
Subjects who require more pain medication will receive a combination of ibuprofen and oral
opiates at the discretion of the treating physician.
All subjects will be discharged from the ED with two 400mg tablets of ibuprofen to be taken
as needed for recurrence of headache. Ibuprofen is an effective migraine treatment [9].
C9. Interim Analysis, Stopping Rules and Sample Size Calculation: An interim analysis will be
performed to detect an overwhelming superiority of the intervention. A data monitoring
committee will convene after 126 subjects have been enrolled. The committee will look for a
statistically significant difference in the primary outcome or a discrepancy in the rate of
adverse effects (measured by rate of hospitalization for presumed adverse reaction to
medication). The medications used in this study are well-known to the medical community and
commonly used. Neither the disease nor the medications cause mortality or significant
permanent disability. Therefore, although the investigators will monitor the adverse effects
that occur during this trial, they do not anticipate that this will have a significant effect
on the outcome.
There are many different approaches to calculation of significance criteria that can be used
in interim analyses, and thus might be used to terminate a trial before the complete data are
collected. The investigators have chosen an intermediate approach, based on the
O'Brien-Fleming procedure [33] and set the interim test criterion at 0.01, and the final test
criterion at 0.04. Using a criterion for significance of 0.04 and a 2-tailed test, this study
will require 100 subjects in each group, for a total of 200 subjects, to have power of 80% to
yield a statistically significant result. This computation assumes that the difference in
persistent headache pain-free proportions is 0.20, specifically, 0.30 versus 0.50 (the rate
of persistent headache pain-free 24 hours after ED discharge in a previous similarly-dosed
metoclopramide trial was 30% [30]). The clinical effect being sought is comparable to a
number needed to treat of five, the largest number needed to treat believed important to
discover for this self-limited disease process. The interim analysis will have adequate power
(0.80) to discover a statistically significant difference (alpha=0.01) if the difference
between the two groups is 30% (.60 versus .30).
C10. Co-Variates: The following variables will be assessed:
C10a. Cutaneous Allodynia: Cutaneous allodynia is felt to be a marker of more intractable
migraines [34] and can be tested for by lightly rubbing a 4 x 4 piece of gauze on the face of
the subject [35]. The data collectors will assess each subject for cutaneous allodynia prior
to the administration of medication.
C10b. Duration of Headache: Although likely to be collinear with allodynia, this co-variate
might be associated with intractable 24 hour headaches [20].
C10c. Pre-Medication: In previous work, although 25% of the investigators' population took no
analgesic medication prior to presentation to the ED, this co-variate did not confound the
association between study medication and persistent pain-free [30]. Nevertheless, the
investigators will record all migraine-relevant medications used by their subjects prior to
ED presentation, group these by class, and determine if this co-variate has a relationship
with the primary outcomes.
C11d. Aura: The investigators know of no documented association between aura and
corticosteroids, but this subject has been inadequately explored.
C11e. Prophylactic Medications: In previous work [30], only a small minority of ED
migraineurs were on prophylactic medication. However, these patients represent a sub-set of
migraineurs with more severe disease.
C11f. Chronic Migraines: Only a small minority of ED migraineurs can be classified as chronic
(Friedman, unpublished data). However, these patients represent a sub-set of migraineurs at
high risk of recurrent 24 hour headaches.
C11g. Medication-Rebound Headaches: This diagnosis has been inadequately explored in the ED
setting and consists of complicated headache patients. The investigators will not exclude
these patients from this study because they are likely to benefit from this intervention
[21].
C11h. Site: To account for site-specific differences from influencing the results, subjects
from each site will be randomized in blocks of six to prevent unequal representation of a
particular site in either arm. This will prevent any one site from overly influencing the
study.
C11i. Race/Ethnicity: This will be based on subject's report. The significance of this
co-variate for this study is unknown.
C11j. Age: This will be recorded. The significance of this co-variate for this study is
unknown.
C12k.Gender: This will be recorded. The significance of this co-variate for this study is
unknown.
C12. Analysis: The data will be analyzed in an "intention-to-treat" manner. Once a patient is
randomized and receives the dexamethasone, their pain scores will be included in the 24-hour
analysis regardless of whether or not they received rescue medication or completed the
protocol. However, lost-to-follow-up subjects will be excluded from the primary analysis (a
sensitivity analysis will be conducted in which lost-to-follow-up subjects are assumed to
have a poor outcome). Study enrollment will continue until the pre-determined number of
subjects have completed the primary endpoint. Chi-square analysis will be used to compare
rates. Students t-tests will be used to compare mean differences in pain scores. Multivariate
regression models will be used to analyze the influence of the co-variates discussed above,
particularly allodynia, duration of headache, and use of medication prior to ED presentation.
Briefly, evidence of confounding will be sought by looking for an association between the
heterogeneous variable and both the independent (study medication) and dependent (pain
status) variables. Between-group differences will be expressed as means or proportions,
bounded by 95% confidence intervals (95% CI).
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