Effects of fremanezumab in patients with chronic migraine and comorbid depression: Subgroup analysis of the randomized HALO CM study.

Journal: Headache
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of fremanezumab in patients with chronic migraine (CM) and moderate to severe depression.

Background: Fremanezumab, a fully humanized monoclonal antibody that selectively targets calcitonin gene-related peptide, has been approved for the preventive treatment of migraine in adults. CM and depression are highly comorbid.

Methods: The 12-week, Phase 3 HALO trial randomized patients with CM to fremanezumab quarterly (675 mg/placebo/placebo), fremanezumab monthly (675/225/225 mg), or placebo. Post hoc analyses evaluated the effects of fremanezumab in patients with moderate to severe depression (baseline 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire sum score ≥10) on monthly number of headache days of at least moderate severity; monthly migraine days; Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC); 6-item Headache Impact Test (HIT-6) scores; and depression.

Results: For the 219/1121 (19.5%) patients with moderate to severe depression at baseline, fremanezumab was associated with a significant reduction in monthly number of headache days of at least moderate severity for active treatment versus placebo (least-squares mean change ± standard error for quarterly dosing: -5.3 ± 0.77; for monthly dosing: -5.5 ± 0.72; and for placebo: -2.2 ± 0.81; both p < 0.001). More patients achieved a ≥50% reduction in headache days of at least moderate severity with fremanezumab (quarterly: 31/78 [39.7%]; monthly: 39/96 [40.6%]) than placebo (9/67 [13.4%]; both p < 0.001). Compared with placebo, fremanezumab improved PGIC and HIT-6 scores.

Conclusions: Fremanezumab demonstrated efficacy in the preventive treatment of CM and reduced headache impact in patients with comorbid depression.

Authors
Richard Lipton, Joshua Cohen, Maja Galic, Michael Seminerio, Paul Yeung, Ernesto Aycardi, Marcelo Bigal, Kristen Bibeau, Dawn Buse
Relevant Conditions

Migraine