Frontiers in Neurology (Oct 2023)

Narrow band green light effects on headache, photophobia, sleep, and anxiety among migraine patients: an open-label study conducted online using daily headache diary

  • Richard B. Lipton,
  • Agustin Melo-Carrillo,
  • Agustin Melo-Carrillo,
  • Mark Severs,
  • Michael Reed,
  • Sait Ashina,
  • Sait Ashina,
  • Sait Ashina,
  • Timothy Houle,
  • Rami Burstein,
  • Rami Burstein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2023.1282236
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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BackgroundNarrow band green light (NbGL) has been shown to relieve headache in small numbers of subjects but large-scale real-world assessments are lacking. The goal of this prospective, observational, open-label, real world study was to determine whether treatment with NbGL during the ictal phase of migraine, improves patients' perception of their headache, photophobia, anxiety and same-night sleep.MethodsThe study was conducted in purchasers of the NbGL Lamp in two phases. In Phase I purchasers of the Lamp completed a survey and were asked to participate in a 6-week diary study. In Phase 2 participants completed daily diaries for 6 weeks. Specifically, they were asked to use their judgement/impression/perception when choosing between headache-improved or headache-unimproved after using the NbGL during acute attacks. Diary outcomes of interest included rates of attacks improve in responders (≥50%), non-responders (<50%), super-responders (≥75%), and super non-responders (<30%).ResultsOf 3,875 purchasers of the Lamp for migraine, 698 (18%) agreed to participate, filled out a pre-study survey, and agreed to a 6-week daily headache diary. Complete data were provided by 181 (26%) participants. Using criteria above, 61, 39, 42, and 27% of participants were classified responder, non-responder, super-responder and super non-responder, respectively. Headache improved in 55% of all 3,232 attacks, in 82% of the 1,803 attacks treated by responders, and in 21% of the 1,429 attacks treated by non-responders. Photophobia improved in 53% of all attacks, 68% of the attacks in responders and in 35% of the attacks in non-responders. Anxiety improved in 34% of all attacks, 46% of the responders' attacks, and 18% of the non-responders' attacks. Sleep improved in 49% of all attacks, 59% of the responders' attacks, and 36% of the non-responders' attacks.ConclusionThis open-label real world study suggests that 2 h of treatment with the lamp during migraine attacks is associated with relief of pain and photophobia, reduction in anxiety, and improved sleep. The absence of rigorous diagnosis and a blinded contemporaneous control group limits the rigor of this interpretation. Improvement in photophobia, anxiety and sleep among the responders may be secondary to the improvement in the headache itself.Clinical trial registrationClinicalTrial.gov (NCT04841083).

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