Early clinical experience with eptinezumab: results of a retrospective observational study of patient response in the United States

Amaal J. Starling, Steven Kymes, Divya Asher, Seema Soni-Brahmbhatt, Meghana Karnik-Henry

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: The efficacy and safety of eptinezumab for preventive migraine treatment in adults have been demonstrated in multiple, large-scale clinical trials. This non-interventional, retrospective, observational chart review was conducted to examine patient response to eptinezumab 100 mg or 300 mg every 12 weeks for 6 months in the clinical setting. Methods: Eight headache specialists who reported early clinical experience with eptinezumab enrolled the first adults (1–6 adults per clinician; age ≥ 18 years) who met predefined selection criteria (including ≥ 12-month history of migraine, ≥ 4 migraine days/month prior to eptinezumab initiation, receipt of ≥ 2 consecutive eptinezumab doses, and ≥ 12-week follow-up period), and provided detailed patient, disease, treatment, and outcome information via SurveyMonkey and standardized case-report forms. Results: Charts from 31 adults (median age, 49 years) with migraine (93.6% chronic) who received eptinezumab for the preventive treatment of migraine were reviewed. Most patients (26/31 [83.9%]) were initiated at 100 mg. Eptinezumab reduced mean headache frequency (24.3 monthly headache days [MHDs] at baseline; 17.1 MHDs at Month 6); mean migraine frequency (17.3 monthly migraine days [MMDs] at baseline; 9.1 MMDs at Month 6); attack severity (17/31 [54.8%] patients); acute headache medication use (12.5 acute medication days at baseline; 7.4 at Month 6); and patient-reported disability (11/22 [50.0%] severe at baseline; 7/19 [36.8%] at Month 6). More than three-quarters of patients (24/31 [77.4%]) perceived improved disability/function and most (30/31 [96.8%]) perceived eptinezumab to be well tolerated after 6 months. Most of the headache specialists reported that eptinezumab was well tolerated by patients (30/31 [96.8%]) and that the intravenous infusion experience was not challenging. Conclusions: Patients with migraine who received 6 months of preventive treatment with eptinezumab experienced reductions in migraine and headache frequency, disability, and acute medication use during the course of treatment.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number158
JournalBMC neurology
Volume23
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2023

Keywords

  • Eptinezumab
  • Headache
  • Migraine
  • Monoclonal antibody
  • Preventive treatment

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Clinical Neurology

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Early clinical experience with eptinezumab: results of a retrospective observational study of patient response in the United States'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this