Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT01854385 |
Other study ID # |
44912 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
Phase 2
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
June 2013 |
Est. completion date |
February 2018 |
Study information
Verified date |
December 2021 |
Source |
University of Washington |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This phase II evaluation of sumatriptan as a treatment for post traumatic headache (PTH) will
examine the methods and approach necessary to take the next step to a phase III trial. The
sample will include 40 persons with mild complicated, moderate or severe TBI who will be
recruited from patients discharged from the acute rehabilitation unit as well as outpatient
clinics and the community who are between 3 and 24 months of injury and will be followed over
3 months. The investigators plan to enroll those who have moderate to severe headache with
frequency of at least four and up to a maximum of fifteen total headache days per month and
at least three months after discharge from hospital. The investigators will use headache
diaries to track the headaches for a month. If subjects still have significant headache, the
investigators will instruct them in the use of sumatriptan 100 mg. to treat headaches. The
subjects will continue to keep daily headache diaries. The investigators will evaluate them
at baseline, Day 30 and Day 90. Each subject will receive weekly telephone follow up calls
from the research staff. The investigators will measure pain severity, duration, recurrence
of headaches, and side effects and how well persons with TBI can use headache diaries.
Description:
I. Specific Aims of Study: The ultimate aim of this Phase II open-label study is to test the
research methods and approach necessary to successfully carry out a Phase III study for the
treatment of post-traumatic headache (PTH). During this study, we will
1. Determine the feasibility of using a headache diary accessed via smart phone
application, the web, or paper/pencil to record accurate headache data in a group of
individuals with TBI, and their caregivers as indicated.
2. Evaluate the approximate effect size of sumatriptan on pain severity, duration, and
recurrence of headaches in persons with moderate to severe PTH in order to establish the
necessary sample size for a Phase III study.
3. Assess the side effect profile of sumatriptan in a brain-injured population as well as
the safety of sumatriptan in subjects with TBI.
4. Evaluate the ability of persons with TBI, and their caregivers as indicated, to
successfully use abortive headache medications and comply with treatment.
5. Examine the relationship between PTH and cognitive, emotional, and other self-report
measures to determine important factors to include in a Phase III study.
This is a single arm, unblinded study enrolling 40 subjects and is being undertaken to test
necessary study instruments and procedures, establish feasibility and determine side effects
in a population with mild complicated, moderate or severe TBI in preparation for a subsequent
Phase III study.
Data collection will occur at enrollment (Clinic Visit 1) at which baseline testing will
occur, Day 30 (Clinic Visit 2), and Day 90 (Clinic Visit 3).
Pre-treatment Visit (Visit 1): Subjects who complete informed consent and meet the inclusion
criteria (with no exclusion criteria) will be asked to complete 30 days of headache diary to
document the number of headaches, headache severity, headache days and description of their
headache and associated symptoms. Research staff will contact them on a weekly basis to
answer questions and maximize accuracy and compliance with the diary. Proper utilization of a
headache diary and success of data input by the subject and caregiver will be evaluated
following weekly interviews with the research assistant.
Treatment Visit (Clinic Visit 2):
A medical history will be obtained to review inclusion and exclusion criteria and to elicit a
thorough review of systems so that adverse events will be identifiable if they occur.
Physical examination will also ensure that cardiovascular status is compatible with
sumatriptan use and will document current status to allow for identification of potential
adverse events. Finally, standard primary headache classification criteria will be reviewed
with each patient to determine whether they meet criteria for migraine or probable migraine.
Headache histories will be assessed and subjects that have experienced between 4-15 headaches
will be included in the medication intervention with Sumatriptan. Subjects who qualify for
the Sumatriptan intervention will receive several assessments, given medication, usage
instructions, and scheduled for weekly phone calls for weeks 5-11. Individuals whose
headaches do not meet criteria for migraine or probable migraine, based on data from headache
diaries, will have their participation in the study end.
Weekly Telephone Follow-Up Calls: Research staff will call each participant weekly to check
on compliance with drug diary use during the first month of the study (Weekly calls 1-3) to
check on compliance in diary usage. For weekly calls in weeks 5-11 (for the intervention
participants), research staff will inquire about study drug usage, and query for adverse
events. Use of rescue medications for headache will be recorded. In the case of minor adverse
effects which are bothersome to the patient, the dosage will be decreased by ½ pill per use.
Follow up Visit (Visit 3). This will be the final visit for the subjects. Vital signs will be
obtained. Drug containers and headache diaries will be collected from all subjects. Outcome
measures will be administered.
Use of sumatriptan and rescue drug: Two packages of nine (9) sumatriptan 100- mg. pills (18
pills total for 2 months of treatment) will be dispensed to each subject on Day 30 once they
have gone through baseline assessment. On average, this will treat a minimum of 5 headaches
or a maximum of 9 headaches per month. Subjects will be instructed to take the sumatriptan at
the onset of headache pain. If subjects are not pain free at 2 hours after the first dose of
study medication, they will be allowed to take one additional pill, but will be limited to 2
pills in a 24 hour period. Subjects will be instructed to take no more than 9 pills in a 30
day period based on research which suggests that additional dosages may increase the risk of
medication-overuse headache. A list of appropriate medications will be provided that they can
use if they: 1) continue to have headache pain 2 hours after their second dose of study drug,
or 2) they have used their 30 day supply of study drug within the month. All subjects will be
contacted by telephone on a weekly basis to review their headache diaries, assess potential
adverse events, review compliance with use of the study drug, assess other treatments being
utilized, and answer any questions.
Data Analysis: Data analysis for the feasibility and safety aims will be primarily
descriptive. The investigators will calculate the percent of subjects who used the diary
successfully, percent who stopped taking sumatriptan because of side effects, percent who
experienced each adverse event, and percent who were able to maintain compliance with
treatment. A confidence interval will be determined for each estimate. To get preliminary
data on efficacy of sumatriptan, headache control will be compared before and after the
participants start taking sumatriptan. The investigators will calculate the percent of
headaches that had complete resolution (pain free at 2 hours) for each person, during the
initial (pre-intervention) month when they used their regular treatment and during the two
months (intervention) when they treated headaches with sumatriptan and compare them using a
paired t-test. The investigators will also examine different definitions of headache relief
(pain free by 30 minutes, no more than mild pain (score <=1) by 30 minutes, no more than mild
pain by 2 hours) to see if another outcome measure may have advantages for a future Phase III
study. Any differences in compliance, side effects, and feasibility based on cognitive
functioning will be described, as well as by other self-report and emotional health measures.
Changes in these measures from pre to post treatment will also be examined to determine
whether there is any change that occurs with treatment and which may be important variables
to include in a Phase III study.