Neurology and Therapy (May 2020)

Improvement in Function after Lasmiditan Treatment: Post Hoc Analysis of Data from Phase 3 Studies

  • Timothy Smith,
  • John H. Krege,
  • Suchitrita S. Rathmann,
  • Sherie A. Dowsett,
  • Ann Hake,
  • Emel S. M. Nery,
  • Brandy R. Matthews,
  • Erin G. Doty

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40120-020-00185-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
pp. 459 – 471

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction Migraine is associated with substantial functional impairment and affects many aspects of daily life. Methods Using data from SAMURAI and SPARTAN (double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 studies) and GLADIATOR (an open-label, phase 3 study enrolling patients who had completed SAMURAI or SPARTAN), we assessed the effects of lasmiditan on migraine-related functional disability at multiple time points from 0.5 to 48 h post dose by asking patients to rate how much the migraine was interfering with normal activities. Pooled data from SAMURAI and SPARTAN (SAMURAI + SPARTAN) and data from GLADIATOR were analyzed using the intention-to-treat populations. Results For SPARTAN + SAMURAI, significantly more patients who received lasmiditan at any dose versus placebo reported freedom from migraine-related functional disability at every timepoint from 2 h post dose, and this difference persisted to 48 h (p < 0.05). Significant differences from placebo in freedom from migraine-related functional disability commenced at 1 h post dose for lasmiditan 200 mg, 1.5 h for lasmiditan 100 mg, and 2 h for lasmiditan 50 mg. Findings from GLADIATOR supported those from SAMURAI + SPARTAN. Conclusion All doses of lasmiditan resulted in an improvement in migraine-related functional disability that persisted to 48 h. In SAMURAI + SPARTAN, a significant difference from placebo was observed as early as 1 h post dose. Trial registration at clinicaltrials.gov SAMURAI (NCT02439320), SPARTAN (NCT02605174), and GLADIATOR (NCT02565186).

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