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Sumatriptan-naproxen and butalbital: a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study
Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 04/30/2012  Clinical Article

Derosier F et al. – This study primarily included subjects whose migraines significantly impacted their lives. Before the study, these subjects used butalbital–containing medications as part of their current migraine treatment regimen and were satisfied with it, suggesting they were butalbital responders who had found a workable treatment strategy for themselves. When treated with SumaRT/Nap versus BCM in this study, however, a significant proportion of subjects reported better treatment outcomes for themselves for both migraine pain and associated symptoms. Use of SumaRT/Nap was also associated with less rescue medication use and a longer time before use of rescue medication compared with both BCM and placebo.

Methods
  • Enrolled subjects were required to have treated at least 1 migraine with a butalbital medication in the past.
  • Enrolled subjects treated 3 moderate to severe migraines using each of the 3 study treatments once in a randomized sequence.
  • The primary endpoint compared SumaRT/Nap versus BCM for sustained pain freedom at 2–24 hours without the use of any rescue medication.
  • This study combines data from 2 identical outpatient, randomized, multicenter, double–blind, double–dummy, 3 attack crossover studies in adult migraineurs (International Classification of Headache Disorders, 2nd edition).

Results
  • A total of 442 subjects treated at least 1 attack with study medication.
  • The majority of the treated subjects were female (88%) with a mean age 43 years, who reported that their migraines had a severe impact on their lives (78% with Headache Impact Test–6 of >59).
  • At screening, 88% of subjects reported current butalbital use; 68% had used butalbital for more than 6 weeks; and 82% reported satisfaction with butalbital.
  • Across treatment groups, 28–29% of subjects took study medication within 15 minutes of migraine onset, 34–37% of subjects took study medication >15 minutes to 2 hours after onset, and 32–36% of subjects took study medication more than 2 hours after onset.
  • This study did not detect a difference at the nominal 0.05 level in percent sustained pain–free between SumaRT/Nap (8%), BCM (6%), and placebo (3%).
  • SumaRT/Nap was superior to BCM for pain free at 2, 4, 6, 8, 24, 48 hours (P ≤ .044); pain relief (mild or no pain) at 2, 4, 6, 8, 24, 48 hours (P ≤ .01); sustained pain relief 2–24 hours (P < .001); migraine free (pain free with no nausea, photophobia, or phonophobia) at 4, 6, 8, 24, 48 hours (P ≤ .046); and complete symptom free (migraine free with no neck/sinus pain) at 4, 6, 8, 48 hours (P ≤ .031).
  • Adverse event incidence was similar for all treatments (10%, 12%, and 9% for placebo, SumaRT/Nap, and BCM, respectively).
  • Nausea was the most frequent adverse event (2%, 2%, and <1% for placebo, SumaRT/Nap, and BCM, respectively).
  • Five serious adverse events were reported by 3 subjects: viral meningitis and colon neoplasm (placebo); chest pain and hypertension 17 days postdose (SumaRT/Nap); and breast cancer (BCM).
  • Investigators judged no serious adverse events related to study medication.

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