Background
The calcitonin gene-related
peptide (CGRP) pathway is a promising target for preventive therapies in
patients with migraine. We assessed the safety and efficacy of AMG 334,
a fully human monoclonal antibody against the CGRP receptor, for
migraine prevention.
Methods
In this
multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 2
trial, patients aged 18–60 years with 4 to 14 migraine days per month
were enrolled at 59 headache and clinical research centres in North
America and Europe, and randomly assigned in a 3:2:2:2 ratio to monthly
subcutaneous placebo, AMG 334 7 mg, AMG 334 21 mg, or AMG 334 70 mg
using a sponsor-generated randomisation sequence centrally executed by
an interactive voice response or interactive web response system. Study
site personnel, patients, and the sponsor study personnel were masked to
the treatment assignment. The primary endpoint was the change in
monthly migraine days from baseline to the last 4 weeks of the 12-week
double-blind treatment phase. The primary endpoint was calculated using
the least squares mean at each timepoint from a generalised linear
mixed-effect model for repeated measures. Safety endpoints were adverse
events, clinical laboratory values, vital signs, and anti-AMG 334
antibodies. The study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01952574. An open-label extension phase of up to 256 weeks is ongoing and will assess the long-term safety of AMG 334.
Findings
From
Aug 6, 2013, to June 30, 2014, 483 patients were randomly assigned to
placebo (n=160), AMG 334 7 mg (n=108), AMG 334 21 mg (n=108), or AMG 334
70 mg (n=107). The mean change in monthly migraine days at week 12 was
−3·4 (SE 0·4) days with AMG 334 70 mg versus −2·3 (0·3) days with
placebo (difference −1·1 days [95% CI −2·1 to −0·2], p=0·021). The mean
reductions in monthly migraine days with the 7 mg (−2·2 [SE 0·4]) and
the 21 mg (−2·4 [0·4]) doses were not significantly different from that
with placebo. Adverse events were recorded in 82 (54%) patients who
received placebo, 54 (50%) patients in the AMG 334 7 mg group, 54 (51%)
patients in the AMG 334 21 mg group, and 57 (54%) patients in the AMG
334 70 mg group. The most frequently reported adverse events were
nasopharyngitis, fatigue, and headache. Serious adverse events were
reported for one patient in the AMG 334 7 mg group (ruptured ovarian
cyst) and one patient in the AMG 334 70 mg group (migraine and vertigo);
these events were judged to be unrelated to AMG 334 treatment. Nine
(3%) of 317 patients had neutralising antibodies. No apparent
association was recorded between patients with positive anti-AMG 334
antibodies and adverse events. No clinically significant vital signs,
laboratory, or electrocardiogram findings were recorded.
Interpretation
These
results suggest that AMG 334 70 mg might be a potential therapy for
migraine prevention in patients with episodic migraine and support
further investigation of AMG 334 in larger phase 3 trials.
Lancet Neurology 2016
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