Journal of Pain Research (Jul 2021)

Impact of Galcanezumab on Total Pain Burden: A Post Hoc Analysis of a Phase 3, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Study in Patients with Episodic Cluster Headache

  • Andrews JS,
  • Kudrow D,
  • Rettiganti M,
  • Oakes T,
  • Bardos JN,
  • Wenzel R,
  • Kuruppu DK,
  • Gaul C,
  • Martinez JM

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 14
pp. 2059 – 2070

Abstract

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J Scott Andrews,1 David Kudrow,2 Mallikarjuna Rettiganti,1 Tina Oakes,1 Jennifer N Bardos,1 Richard Wenzel,1 Dulanji K Kuruppu,1 Charly Gaul,3 James M Martinez1 1Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, IN, USA; 2California Medical Clinic for Headache, Santa Monica, CA, USA; 3Headache Center, Frankfurt, GermanyCorrespondence: Mallikarjuna RettigantiEli Lilly and Company, Lilly Corporate Center, 893 Delaware St., Indianapolis, IN, 46285, USATel +1 3176519378Email [email protected]: In a phase 3 study, galcanezumab significantly reduced the frequency of episodic cluster headache attacks across weeks 1– 3 (primary endpoint) compared with placebo. However, multiple pain dimensions may contribute to the total burden of episodic cluster headache pain. This post hoc analysis assessed the impact of galcanezumab on the total pain burden of episodic cluster headache using a composite measure.Patients and Methods: Patients with episodic cluster headache were randomized 1:1 to galcanezumab 300 mg or placebo once monthly for 8 weeks. Mean weekly total pain burden was calculated (daily cluster headache attack frequency × average duration × average pain severity summed over 7 days) using data collected in an electronic patient-reported outcomes diary. Change from baseline in weekly total pain burden across weeks 1– 3 was compared between galcanezumab and placebo. To explore construct validity, mean weekly total pain burden scores were stratified by Patient Global Impression of Improvement (PGI-I) responses at the week 4 clinic visit.Results: The reduction from baseline in mean weekly total pain burden was significantly greater with galcanezumab (N=49) than with placebo (N=57): the least squares mean difference was − 11.18 severity-weighted hours (p=0.035). Median weekly total pain burden decreased as PGI-I ratings improved, from 33.6 to 5.0 severity-weighted hours for patients who felt “very much worse” and “very much better,” respectively.Conclusion: Galcanezumab significantly reduced mean weekly total pain burden compared with placebo in patients with episodic cluster headache. The composite pain measure demonstrated construct validity. Total pain burden may provide a holistic measure of the pain of episodic cluster headache.Clinical Trials: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02397473.Keywords: composite pain, frequency, severity, duration, CGRP

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