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- Héctor R Martínez, Orlando Londoño, Leonel Cantú-Martínez, Luz del Carmen Tarín, and Carlos D Castillo.
- Neurology Service, Hospital Universitario, Monterrey, NL, Mexico.
- Headache. 2003 Nov 1; 43 (10): 1080-4.
BackgroundAnticonvulsants now are commonly used for headache prevention. Topiramate, one of the newer anticonvulsants, recently has been demonstrated to be effective as monotherapy for migraine prophylaxis.ObjectiveTo assess the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of topiramate as adjunctive prophylactic therapy for migraine.Material And MethodsA prospective trial involving patients with more than 3 migraine attacks per month was performed. Patients continued their usual prophylactic treatment. Baseline analgesic use and frequency and duration of migraine attacks were recorded. A 4-point visual analog scale evaluated severity. Laboratory tests, electrocardiogram, and computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging were performed before study entry. After informed consent was obtained, patients were instructed to take 25 mg of topiramate per day, with 25- to 50-mg weekly increments to a maximum of 100 mg per day. Safety was assessed at the first month; tolerability and efficacy were assessed every week for the first month and then every month for 3 months. Effectiveness was assessed by comparing baseline and on-treatment migraine status, and data were analyzed by the Fisher exact test.ResultsTwenty-five women and 11 men (mean age, 44 years) were evaluated. Existing prophylactic treatment was either propranolol or flunarizine (or both) in 80% of the patients. At 3 months of therapy with topiramate, headache frequency decreased from 17 to 3 episodes per month, headache duration from 559 to 32 minutes, and intensity from 9 to 1 by visual analog scale (P <.001). Improvement in frequency and severity of migraine was observed in 83% of patients. Slight or no changes in headache were observed in 6 patients. Tolerability was good in 30 patients. The most common side effects were acroparesthesias, weight loss, sleepiness, and headache worsening. No adverse interaction with propranolol or flunarizine was observed.ConclusionsThese results suggest that topiramate is efficacious and safe as an adjunctive treatment in patients with migraine whose prior response to prophylactic management has been less than satisfactory.
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