Abstract
Introduction
Rapid onset and sustained efficacy are important for acute migraine treatment. Global phase 3 trials have demonstrated the early onset and sustained efficacy of the 5-HT1F receptor agonist lasmiditan. In this prespecified analysis of the MONONOFU study, we assessed the onset and sustained efficacy of lasmiditan in Japanese patients with migraine.
Methods
MONONOFU was a multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled, phase 2 study conducted in Japan (May 2019–June 2020). Eligible adults with migraine (N = 846; modified intent-to-treat population, N = 682) were randomized 7:3:7:6 to placebo, lasmiditan 50 mg, 100 mg, or 200 mg, taken orally within 4 h of moderate-to-severe migraine onset. Patients recorded headache severity and symptoms predose and 0.5–48 h postdose. Sustained and modified sustained pain freedom were defined as patients who were headache pain-free 2 h postdose and had no pain (sustained pain freedom) or had mild or no pain (modified sustained pain freedom) at 24 or 48 h without rescue/recurrence medications. Efficacy outcomes were analyzed by logistic regression. Patients also recorded the actual time of pain-free and of meaningful pain relief (Kaplan–Meier analysis).
Results
Compared with placebo, significantly more lasmiditan-treated (100 or 200 mg) patients were headache pain-free, had pain relief, were free of their most bothersome symptom, or had total migraine freedom (no headache or migraine-associated symptoms) within 30–60 min. Median time to pain-free was 9.26, 6.88, 2.75, and 2.30 h in placebo, 50-mg, 100-mg, and 200-mg lasmiditan groups, respectively. Significantly greater proportions of patients treated with 100 (19.7–29.5%) or 200 mg (21.1–35.7%) lasmiditan had sustained or modified sustained pain freedom at 24 or 48 h compared with placebo (10.4–15.8%).
Conclusion
This prespecified analysis of data from MONONOFU has confirmed that the efficacy of lasmiditan is rapid in onset and sustained in patients with moderate-to-severe migraine in Japan.
Trial Registration
ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03962738).
Similar content being viewed by others
Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
Why carry out this study? |
There is an unmet need for new and effective options for the acute treatment of migraine that have rapid onset and sustained efficacy. |
Global clinical trials have demonstrated that the efficacy of the 5-HT1F receptor agonist lasmiditan is both rapid and sustained; however, the time course of lasmiditan efficacy in Asian patients has not been established. |
This prespecified analysis of the MONONOFU randomized placebo-controlled study assessed the onset and sustained efficacy of lasmiditan in Japanese patients with migraine. |
What was learned from the study? |
Compared with placebo, significantly more lasmiditan-treated (100 or 200 mg) patients were headache pain-free within 30–60 min, and significantly more patients had sustained pain freedom for up to 48 h without taking rescue or recurrence medications. |
These results confirm the rapid and sustained efficacy of lasmiditan for the acute treatment of moderate-to-severe migraine in Japanese patients. |
Introduction
Migraine affects approximately 1 in 10 people (11.6% of people worldwide [1] and 8.4% in Japan) [2] and has substantial impacts on day-to-day functioning and quality of life [3]. Therefore, it is important to quickly resolve or improve migraine-associated symptoms when a migraine attack appears and to sustain these resolved or improved symptoms [4, 5]. Indeed, a survey of people with migraine revealed that the most important attributes of migraine medication are complete pain relief, lack of recurrence, and rapid onset [6]. There is an unmet need for acute treatments for migraine [7, 8], and new treatment options with rapid and sustained efficacy are desired [4, 5].
Lasmiditan is a selective 5-HT1F receptor agonist that has been developed for the acute treatment of migraine. Lasmiditan acts at the trigeminal nerve system to inhibit neurotransmitter release and in the central nervous system to inhibit pain transmission, without causing vasoconstriction [9, 10]. Lasmiditan has been studied in several global phase 3 placebo-controlled and long-term extension studies [11,12,13,14,15] and was approved as an oral treatment for migraine in the USA in 2019 and Japan in 2022. The pharmacokinetics of lasmiditan in healthy Japanese adults is similar to that in non-Japanese adults; in both groups there is a rapid absorption phase, and the half-life following a single oral dose is about 4 h [16]. Furthermore, a randomized placebo-controlled phase 2 study (MONONOFU) in adults with migraine in Japan demonstrated that the efficacy and tolerability of lasmiditan for the acute treatment of migraine were also similar to the results seen in non-Japanese adults [17].
The rapid onset and sustained efficacy of lasmiditan have been demonstrated in pooled analyses of the global phase 3 studies [18, 19]. Rates of pain relief and freedom from the most bothersome symptom (MBS) were significantly greater than placebo as early as 30 min (first assessment time) after taking lasmiditan (100 mg or 200 mg); rates of freedom from pain and total migraine freedom (i.e., pain-free and not experiencing migraine-associated symptoms) were significantly greater than placebo starting at 1 h postdose [11, 18]. Moreover, significantly greater rates of pain-free, MBS-free, and total migraine freedom were sustained at 24 and 48 h postdose [19]. However, because the global phase 3 studies enrolled very few patients of Asian background [11,12,13,14,15], there is little evidence regarding the onset and sustained response to lasmiditan in Asian patients.
According to Japanese clinical practice guidelines, the ideal acute treatment for migraine headache would have rapid onset of efficacy against both pain and associated symptoms, efficacy would be sustained without recurrence or use of additional medications, side effects would be minimal, patients would be able to treat themselves easily, and the treatment would be affordable [5]. The present analysis was designed to assess the first two of these characteristics—namely, onset and sustained efficacy—for lasmiditan in the acute treatment of migraine in adults in Japan, using data from the MONONOFU study. Additionally, this analysis examines the actual time to onset of efficacy and documents the use of permitted medications after taking study drug, which were not reported in the analysis of the global studies. Unlike the global phase 3 studies, a second dose of study drug was not permitted in MONONOFU; thus, the time course reflects the efficacy of a single dose of lasmiditan.
Methods
Study Design, Study Population, and Treatment Protocol
The design of the MONONOFU study has been described previously [17]. Briefly, MONONOFU was a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 2 study conducted in Japan between May 30, 2019 and June 8, 2020. The primary objective of the MONONOFU study was to evaluate the efficacy of lasmiditan 200 mg for achieving pain freedom vs. placebo. To be included in the study, patients were aged 18 years or older, had migraine with or without aura fulfilling the International Headache Society diagnostic criteria [20], a history of disabling migraine for at least 1 year, a history of 3–8 migraine attacks/month and less than 15 headache days/month during the past 3 months, and a Migraine Disability Assessment score of at least 11 [21, 22]. Eligible patients were randomized 7:3:7:6 to oral placebo, lasmiditan 50 mg, 100 mg, or 200 mg, which was self-administered within 4 h of onset of a single moderate-to-severe migraine [17]. The protocol was approved by the ethics review board of each site (Supplementary Material Table S1), and all patients provided written informed consent. The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki, the Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences International Ethical Guidelines, and in compliance with the International Council for Harmonisation Guideline for Good Clinical Practice, and related laws and regulations. The study is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03962738).
Assessments
Headache severity and symptoms were recorded in the patient’s electronic diary (eDiary) at each assessment time point (predose and 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 24, and 48 h postdose). Headache severity was assessed using the International Headache Society 4-point headache severity rating scale (0 = no pain, 1 = mild pain, 2 = moderate pain, and 3 = severe pain) [23]. Patients also recorded the actual time at which they were pain-free and the actual time at which they had what they considered meaningful pain relief.
Outcome Measures
This prespecified analysis focuses on onset and sustained efficacy of lasmiditan. Onset of efficacy was described using the time course of the proportion of patients who achieved the following endpoints: pain-free, defined as moderate or severe headache pain at baseline becoming no pain; pain relief, defined as moderate or severe headache pain at baseline becoming mild or no pain; MBS-free, defined as MBS, identified by the individual at baseline from migraine-associated symptoms of nausea, phonophobia, or photophobia, at baseline becoming none; total migraine freedom, defined as experiencing no headache pain or any other migraine symptoms (nausea, vomiting, phonophobia, or photophobia); time to pain-free, defined as the actual time to pain-free that a patient recorded when the patient determined that moderate or severe headache pain had become “no pain”; and time to meaningful pain relief, defined as the actual time to pain relief that a patient recorded when the patient determined that headache relief had become “meaningful”.
Sustained efficacy was described via the outcome measures of “sustained pain freedom” and “modified sustained pain freedom”. Sustained pain freedom was assessed by the proportion of patients who experienced no headache pain at 2 h postdose and no pain at 24 h or 48 h postdose, having not used any rescue/recurrence medications. Modified sustained pain freedom was assessed by the proportion of patients who experienced no headache pain at 2 h postdose and had no or mild pain at 24 h or 48 h postdose, having not used any rescue/recurrence medications; this definition is based on a meta-analysis of triptan trials by Ferrari et al., who suggested that recurrence of mild headache that did not require rescue medication was unlikely to be clinically significant [24]. For the analysis of modified sustained pain freedom, patients with a missing evaluation at 24 h were excluded from the 24-h analysis, instead of being treated as a nonresponder; similarly, patients with a missing evaluation at 48 h were excluded from the 48-h analysis. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), acetaminophen, caffeine, and/or antiemetic drugs were permitted as rescue/recurrence medications after completion of assessment at 2 h postdose, and triptans, ergots, opioids, and barbiturates were permitted after completion of assessment at 24 h postdose (Fig. 1). Taking a prohibited rescue/recurrence medication or taking a permitted medication outside the allowed times was considered a protocol deviation. A second dose of study drug was not permitted at any time.
Statistical Analyses
All analyses in this article were prespecified. Analyses were conducted in the intent-to-treat (ITT) population, defined as all randomized patients with a moderate or severe migraine headache who received at least one dose of study drug and had any postdose headache assessment data, or the modified ITT (mITT) population, defined as all patients in the ITT population who treated a moderate or severe migraine headache within 4 h of onset. Time to pain-free and time to meaningful pain relief were estimated using the Kaplan–Meier method, and 95% confidence intervals were derived. Patients were censored at the first time they took rescue or recurrence medication or at 48 h if they did not become pain-free or achieve meaningful pain relief. Other endpoints were analyzed using logistic regression with p values based on Wald’s test. Treatment dose and baseline use of preventive migraine medications (Yes/No) were used as factors. Patients who took rescue or recurrence medications were treated as nonresponders at all subsequent time points. At 2 h postdose, a multiplicity adjustment was conducted by comparing placebo and the lasmiditan 200-mg group for pain-free, and placebo and the lasmiditan 100-mg group for pain relief (gate-keeping method). The other analyses reported herein were not adjusted for multiplicity. Hypothesis tests were based on a two-sided α = 0.05. All analyses were conducted using SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA).
Results
Patient Disposition and Characteristics
As described previously [17], 846 patients were randomized, 691 took the study drug (safety population), 687 were in the ITT population, and 682 were in the mITT population. Most patients were female (83.1%), mean age was 45.2 years, mean duration of migraine history was 24.2 years, and mean baseline Migraine Disability Assessment total score was 22.3 [17]. Most patients (92.5%) reported that the treated migraines were moderate in severity and most (71.4%) reported experiencing associated symptoms of nausea, phonophobia, and/or photophobia [17].
Onset of Efficacy
Compared with placebo, a significantly higher proportion of patients reported that they were pain-free after receiving lasmiditan 100 mg or 200 mg (Fig. 2a; Supplementary Material Table S2). As reported previously [17], significant differences from placebo were observed starting at 0.5 h for the lasmiditan 200-mg group and at 1 h for the lasmiditan 100-mg group. These differences were maintained through the time point of 4 h in both the 200-mg and 100-mg dose groups. A significant difference from placebo was also seen for the 50-mg lasmiditan group at 4 h. A similar pattern was seen for pain relief, although a significant difference was seen in the lasmiditan 50-mg group starting at 2 h postdose (Fig. 2b; Supplementary Material Table S2). Compared with placebo, the proportion of patients who were MBS-free was significantly higher in the lasmiditan 50-mg, 100-mg, and 200-mg groups starting at 3, 1, and 2 h postdose, respectively (Fig. 2c; Supplementary Material Table S2). The proportion of patients with total migraine freedom in the lasmiditan 200-mg and 100-mg treatment groups was significantly higher than in the placebo group starting from 1 h postdose, and in the lasmiditan 50-mg group at 4 h postdose (Fig. 2d; Supplementary Material Table S3).
Median time to pain-free and median time to meaningful pain relief were numerically shorter in all lasmiditan treatment groups than in the placebo group (Table 1). Median time to pain-free was 2.30, 2.75, and 6.88 h in the lasmiditan 200-mg, 100-mg, and 50-mg groups, respectively, vs. 9.26 h in the placebo group. Median time to meaningful pain relief was 1.14, 1.31, and 1.80 h in the lasmiditan 200-mg, 100-mg, and 50-mg groups, respectively, vs. 2.99 h in the placebo group.
The time to first becoming headache pain-free and the time to having meaningful pain relief were assessed by Kaplan–Meier analysis of eDiary data recorded at the time of each event. There was a rapid increase in the proportion of patients who were pain-free or who had meaningful pain relief from lasmiditan, which reached a maximum level at about 3–4 h postdose (Fig. 3; Supplementary Material Tables S4 and S5). The proportion of patients who were pain-free or who had meaningful pain relief was numerically higher in the lasmiditan 200-mg and 100-mg groups than in the placebo group starting at 1 h postdose and continuing for at least 8 h. The proportion of patients in the lasmiditan 50-mg group who were pain-free or who had meaningful pain relief was intermediate between placebo and the higher lasmiditan dose groups.
Sustained Efficacy
In the ITT population, no patients in any treatment group took a rescue or recurrence medication between 0 and 2 h postdose, or between 24 and 48 h postdose (Table 2). The proportion of patients who took a rescue or recurrence medication between 2 and 24 h postdose was generally low (0.6%, 1.9%, and 2.3% in the lasmiditan 200-mg, 100-mg, and 50-mg groups, respectively, and 3.8% in the placebo group; Tables 2 and 3). Among the ITT population, the proportion of patients who were pain-free at 2 h, who did not take rescue or recurrence medications, and who experienced sustained pain freedom (Fig. 4a) or modified sustained pain freedom (Fig. 4b) at 24 and 48 h postdose was significantly higher in the lasmiditan 100-mg and 200-mg treatment groups, and numerically higher in the lasmiditan 50-mg group, than in the placebo group. The proportion of patients who had mild pain at 24 or 48 h was relatively small (Table 3).
Discussion
This prespecified analysis of the MONONOFU study confirmed the rapid and sustained efficacy of lasmiditan for the acute treatment of migraine in Asian patients. Compared with placebo, significantly more patients treated with lasmiditan 100 mg or 200 mg were free of pain within 30–60 min, with similar results for other measures of efficacy, including total migraine freedom. In addition, lasmiditan treatment reduced the median time to being free of pain and the median time to meaningful pain relief. Moreover, the proportion of patients who were pain-free at 2 h, did not take subsequent medications, and had no pain at 24 or 48 h was higher with lasmiditan than with placebo. These results indicate that lasmiditan may be a new acute treatment option for migraine in Asian patients that is both fast-acting and long-lasting.
Lasmiditan treatment, especially the 100-mg and 200-mg doses, was associated with a rapid onset of efficacy. Significantly more patients treated with lasmiditan than with placebo reported being pain-free, having pain relief, being MBS-free, and having total migraine freedom within 2 h. These results are consistent with the analysis of global lasmiditan trials [18] and are similar to reports of triptan onset [25]. Previous studies have shown that acute treatments that result in complete freedom from pain are likely to improve other clinically important measures of efficacy (e.g., MBS-free) [26] and reduce the risk of developing chronic migraine [27]. Importantly, in the current study, significantly higher rates of total migraine freedom, which includes not only freedom from pain but also freedom from migraine-related symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, phonophobia, and photophobia, were also achieved as early as 1 h after treatment in the higher lasmiditan dose groups. Total migraine freedom may be a more accurate reflection of a patient’s ability to function in daily life than pain alone [28]. In addition, the median time to being free of pain was reduced from more than 9 h in the placebo group to as short as 2.3 h in the lasmiditan 200-mg group; median time to meaningful pain relief was also shortened from approximately 3 h with placebo to just over 1 h with lasmiditan 200 mg. In addition, using Kaplan–Meier analysis of the time to pain freedom, we could also observe higher rates of freedom from pain in the ITT population between 4 and 8 h postdose when headache severity assessments were not scheduled. Overall, these results support the rapid alleviation of both pain and migraine-associated symptoms by lasmiditan.
Most previous studies of lasmiditan and other acute treatments for migraine have allowed the use of rescue/recurrence medications (in some instances, including a second dose of study drug) after the standard efficacy time point of 2 h. However, inclusion of patients taking additional medications in analyses may obscure the effect of the primary dose of study drug [29]. In our study, rescue or recurrence medications were prohibited during the first 2 h and restricted thereafter (NSAIDs/acetaminophen/caffeine/antiemetics allowed after 2 h, triptans/ergots/opioids/barbiturates allowed after 24 h); a second dose of study drug was not permitted. Only a small proportion of patients took permitted rescue or recurrence medications, all between 2 and 24 h postdose, and the proportion was smaller in the lasmiditan groups (0.6–2.3%) than in the placebo group (3.8%). These rates of additional medication were much lower than the rates of taking a second dose of study drug in the global phase 3 studies (21.2–39.0% in lasmiditan groups vs. 39.5–59.9% in placebo groups) [13, 14]. This difference may be related to the difference in study design in which permitting a second dose of study drug in the global studies—compared with the medication restrictions in this study—might have encouraged more patients to supplement the initial lasmiditan dose.
When the durability of efficacy of acute treatments is assessed, the International Headache Society has recommended sustained freedom from pain as a more robust outcome than recurrence rate because it combines initial response, use of rescue medication, and relapse [23]. Consistent with the pooled analysis of global data [19], more lasmiditan-treated patients experienced sustained freedom from pain without taking rescue/recurrence medications at 24 and 48 h than placebo-treated patients. Between 21% and 36% of lasmiditan-treated patients had modified sustained pain freedom at 24 and 48 h compared with 14–16% of placebo-treated patients. These rates, particularly for lasmiditan 200 mg, are higher than those seen for sumatriptan (20% at 24 h) and most other triptans [24]. Another indirect comparison with the pooled analysis of global lasmiditan data suggested that lasmiditan 200 mg is similar in sustained effect to sumatriptan 100 mg [19].
Although triptans are the accepted first-line prescription medication for acute treatment of moderate or severe migraine, some patients respond poorly, experience recurrences within 24–48 h, or have contraindications to triptan use, such as cardiovascular disease [30, 31]. These unmet needs have prompted the development of several new classes of migraine therapies, including lasmiditan and the calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonists (gepants), two of which (rimegepant and ubrogepant) have been approved in the USA as oral acute treatments for migraine [32, 33]. Tfelt-Hansen and Diener have recommended that a therapeutic gain (i.e., the difference in pain-free rate between treatment and placebo groups) of greater than 5% is a clinically relevant threshold for marking the onset of efficacy [34]. In the global lasmiditan trials, this threshold was reached for pain-free at 60 min for the 200-mg dose and 90 min for the 100-mg dose [18], earlier than seen with the oral gepants [34, 35]. In this analysis of the MONONOFU study, the therapeutic gain for pain freedom exceeded the 5% threshold at 60 min for both the 200-mg (therapeutic gain 11.4%) and 100-mg (therapeutic gain 10.2%) doses, confirming the early onset of clinically meaningful efficacy with lasmiditan. Although efficacy measures between 2 and 24 h were not reported in the primary global lasmiditan trials [13, 14], a subsequent Kaplan–Meier analysis confirmed that the therapeutic gains at 6 and 8 h were 25% for lasmiditan 200 mg and 18% for lasmiditan 100 mg [29]. Moreover, the therapeutic gain at 2 h (21% and 15% for 200 mg and 100 mg, respectively) appeared to be greater than with the gepants (7–9.5%) [29], although head-to-head trials are needed to determine if any true difference exists. The Kaplan–Meier analysis presented in this report confirms that the therapeutic gain of lasmiditan over placebo is maintained between 2 and 8 h postdose (200 mg: 29.6% at 2 h, 18.8% at 8 h; 100 mg: 22.0% at 2 h, 18.1% at 8 h).
Three lasmiditan dose groups were included in the MONONOFU study and in these prespecified analyses. Although lasmiditan 200 mg may be preferred over 50 mg and 100 mg with respect to rapid onset of action and long-lasting effect, the proportion of patients reporting at least one treatment-emergent adverse event increases with higher lasmiditan dose [17]. Therefore, considering the risk-to-benefit balance, we believe the optimal dose of lasmiditan is 100 mg. However, given that the severity of migraine attacks and patient backgrounds vary, having several dose options would be beneficial for patients.
This report presents the results of prespecified analyses of the randomized placebo-controlled MONONOFU study that included multiple measures of efficacy related to pain and migraine-associated symptoms every 30 min for the first 2 h to capture early onset of lasmiditan efficacy. In addition, we analyzed the actual time to freedom from pain and time to meaningful pain relief using data reported by patients in the eDiary. These are the first prespecified analyses performed to describe the onset and sustained efficacy of lasmiditan in a clinical trial; the previous global results were from a pooled post hoc integrated analysis [19]. This report also provides the first analyses of sustained efficacy of lasmiditan in an Asian population. However, because efficacy assessments did not start until 30 min after dosing, earlier effects occurring before 30 min could not be detected. Unlike the global studies, rescue and recurrence medications were restricted in MONONOFU and did not include a second dose of study drug. Moreover, few patients in this study took rescue medications through 48 h. As a limitation, the small sample size in the lasmiditan 50-mg arm restricts interpretation of the statistical analysis results. In addition, the number of patients with missing evaluations at 24 or 48 h was relatively high, which will have affected the analysis of sustained and modified sustained pain freedom. Finally, although these results are in a Japanese population, they are consistent with observations in trial populations from the USA, UK, and Germany [18, 19].
Conclusion
This prespecified analysis of data from the MONONOFU study has confirmed that the efficacy of lasmiditan is rapid in onset and sustained in patients with moderate-to-severe migraine in Japan.
References
Woldeamanuel YW, Cowan RP. Migraine affects 1 in 10 people worldwide featuring recent rise: a systematic review and meta-analysis of community-based studies involving 6 million participants. J Neurol Sci. 2017;372:307–15.
Sakai F, Igarashi H. Prevalence of migraine in Japan: a nationwide survey. Cephalalgia. 1997;17(1):15–22.
Ueda K, Ye W, Lombard L, et al. Real-world treatment patterns and patient-reported outcomes in episodic and chronic migraine in Japan: analysis of data from the Adelphi migraine disease specific programme. J Headache Pain. 2019;20(1):68.
Ailani J, Burch RC, Robbins MS, Board of Directors of the American Headache Society. The American Headache Society Consensus Statement: update on integrating new migraine treatments into clinical practice. Headache. 2021;61(7):1021–39.
Headache Clinical Practice Guideline Development Committee. Clinical practice guideline for headache disorders 2021. Tokyo: Igaku-Shoin; 2021.
Lipton RB, Stewart WF. Acute migraine therapy: do doctors understand what patients with migraine want from therapy? Headache. 1999;39(Suppl 2):S20–6.
Hirata K, Ueda K, Ye W, et al. Factors associated with insufficient response to acute treatment of migraine in Japan: analysis of real-world data from the Adelphi Migraine Disease Specific Programme. BMC Neurol. 2020;20(1):274.
Lipton RB, Buse DC, Serrano D, Holland S, Reed ML. Examination of unmet treatment needs among persons with episodic migraine: results of the American Migraine Prevalence and Prevention (AMPP) Study. Headache. 2013;53(8):1300–11.
Clemow DB, Johnson KW, Hochstetler HM, Ossipov MH, Hake AM, Blumenfeld AM. Lasmiditan mechanism of action - review of a selective 5-HT1F agonist. J Headache Pain. 2020;21(1):71.
Nelson DL, Phebus LA, Johnson KW, et al. Preclinical pharmacological profile of the selective 5-HT1F receptor agonist lasmiditan. Cephalalgia. 2010;30(10):1159–69.
Ashina M, Reuter U, Smith T, et al. Randomized, controlled trial of lasmiditan over four migraine attacks: findings from the CENTURION study. Cephalalgia. 2021;41(3):294–304.
Brandes JL, Klise S, Krege JH, et al. Interim results of a prospective, randomized, open-label, phase 3 study of the long-term safety and efficacy of lasmiditan for acute treatment of migraine (the GLADIATOR study). Cephalalgia. 2019;39(11):1343–57.
Goadsby PJ, Wietecha LA, Dennehy EB, et al. Phase 3 randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study of lasmiditan for acute treatment of migraine. Brain. 2019;142(7):1894–904.
Kuca B, Silberstein SD, Wietecha L, et al. Lasmiditan is an effective acute treatment for migraine: a phase 3 randomized study. Neurology. 2018;91(24):e2222–32.
Lipton RB, Lombard L, Ruff DD, et al. Trajectory of migraine-related disability following long-term treatment with lasmiditan: results of the GLADIATOR study. J Headache Pain. 2020;21(1):20.
Komori M, Mimura H, Tsai M, Ozeki A, Takaichi G, Wilbraham D. Safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of lasmiditan in healthy Japanese and Caucasian subjects. Rinsho Yakuri. 2020;51(3):119–27.
Sakai F, Takeshima T, Homma G, Tanji Y, Katagiri H, Komori M. Phase 2 randomized placebo-controlled study of lasmiditan for the acute treatment of migraine in Japanese patients. Headache. 2021;61(5):755–65.
Ashina M, Vasudeva R, Jin L, et al. Onset of efficacy following oral treatment with lasmiditan for the acute treatment of migraine: integrated results from 2 randomized double-blind placebo-controlled phase 3 clinical studies. Headache. 2019;59(10):1788–801.
Doty EG, Krege JH, Jin L, Raskin J, Halker Singh RB, Kalidas K. Sustained responses to lasmiditan: results from post-hoc analyses of two phase 3 randomized clinical trials for acute treatment of migraine. Cephalalgia. 2019;39(12):1569–76.
Headache Classification Subcommittee of the International Headache Society. The international classification of headache disorders: 2nd edition. Cephalalgia. 2004;24(Suppl 1):9–160.
Lipton RB, Stewart WF, Sawyer J, Edmeads JG. Clinical utility of an instrument assessing migraine disability: the Migraine Disability Assessment (MIDAS) questionnaire. Headache. 2001;41(9):854–61.
Stewart WF, Lipton RB, Dowson AJ, Sawyer J. Development and testing of the Migraine Disability Assessment (MIDAS) Questionnaire to assess headache-related disability. Neurology. 2001;56(6 Suppl 1):S20–8.
Diener HC, Tassorelli C, Dodick DW, et al. Guidelines of the International Headache Society for controlled trials of acute treatment of migraine attacks in adults: fourth edition. Cephalalgia. 2019;39(6):687–710.
Ferrari MD, Goadsby PJ, Roon KI, Lipton RB. Triptans (serotonin, 5-HT1B/1D agonists) in migraine: detailed results and methods of a meta-analysis of 53 trials. Cephalalgia. 2002;22(8):633–58.
Hou M, Liu H, Li Y, et al. Efficacy of triptans for the treatment of acute migraines: a quantitative comparison based on the dose-effect and time-course characteristics. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 2019;75(10):1369–78.
Lipton RB, Baygani SK, Tepper SJ, et al. A close association of freedom from pain, migraine-related functional disability, and other outcomes: results of a post hoc analysis of randomized lasmiditan studies SAMURAI and SPARTAN. J Headache Pain. 2021;22(1):101.
Lipton RB, Fanning KM, Serrano D, Reed ML, Cady R, Buse DC. Ineffective acute treatment of episodic migraine is associated with new-onset chronic migraine. Neurology. 2015;84(7):688–95.
Rodgers AJ, Hustad CM, Cady RK, et al. Total migraine freedom, a potential primary endpoint to assess acute treatment in migraine: comparison to the current FDA requirement using the complete rizatriptan study database. Headache. 2011;51(3):356–68.
Doty EG, Krege JH, Pohl G, Case M, Dowsett SA, Tepper SJ. Pain freedom at 2 to 8 hours with lasmiditan: a comparison with rimegepant and ubrogepant. Headache. 2020;60(8):1793–6.
Cooper W, Doty EG, Hochstetler H, Hake A, Martin V. The current state of acute treatment for migraine in adults in the United States. Postgrad Med. 2020;132(7):581–9.
Ferrari MD, Goadsby PJ, Burstein R, et al. Migraine. Nat Rev Dis Primers. 2022;8(1):2.
Moreno-Ajona D, Chan C, Villar-Martínez MD, Goadsby PJ. Targeting CGRP and 5-HT1F receptors for the acute therapy of migraine: a literature review. Headache. 2019;59(Suppl 2):3–19.
Moreno-Ajona D, Villar-Martínez MD, Goadsby PJ. New generation gepants: migraine acute and preventive medications. J Clin Med. 2022;11(6):1656.
Tfelt-Hansen P, Diener HC. Onset of action in placebo-controlled migraine attacks trials: a literature review and recommendation. Cephalalgia. 2021;41(2):148–55.
Goadsby PJ, Blumenfeld AM, Lipton RB, et al. Time course of efficacy of ubrogepant for the acute treatment of migraine: clinical implications. Cephalalgia. 2021;41(5):546–60.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank all study participants.
Funding
This study was sponsored by Eli Lilly Japan K.K., Kobe, Japan, manufacturer of lasmiditan. Eli Lilly Japan K.K. and Daiichi Sankyo Company, Limited funded the journal’s Rapid Service fee.
Medical Writing Assistance
Medical writing assistance was provided by Koa Webster, PhD, and Rebecca Lew, PhD, CMPP, of ProScribe – Envision Pharma Group, and was funded by Eli Lilly Japan K.K. and Daiichi Sankyo Company, Limited. ProScribe’s services complied with international guidelines for Good Publication Practice.
Authorship
All named authors meet the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) criteria for authorship for this article, take responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole, and have given their approval for this version to be published.
Author Contributions
All authors participated in the interpretation of study results, and in the drafting, critical revision, and approval of the final version of the manuscript. Mika Komori, Yuka Tanji, Akichika Ozeki, and Fumihiko Sakai were involved in the study design. Yasuhiko Matsumori and Fumihiko Sakai were investigators in the study and collected study data. Akichika Ozeki conducted the statistical analysis.
Prior Presentation
This manuscript contains some data that were previously presented at the 49th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Headache Society, Shizuoka, Japan (November 19–21, 2021).
Disclosures
Yasuhiko Matsumori received personal consultancy fees from Amgen K.K., Daiichi Sankyo Company, Limited, Eli Lilly Japan K.K., and Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd during the conduct of the study. Mika Komori, Yuka Tanji, and Akichika Ozeki are employees of Eli Lilly Japan K.K. and have minor shareholdings in Eli Lilly and Company. Fumihiko Sakai reports consulting for Eli Lilly Japan K.K., Amgen K.K., and Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.
Compliance with Ethics Guidelines
The protocol and protocol amendments were approved by the institutional review boards at each study site (Supplementary Material Table S1). All patients provided written informed consent. The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki, the Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences International Ethical Guidelines, and in compliance with the International Council for Harmonisation Guideline for Good Clinical Practice, and related laws and regulations.
Data Availability
Eli Lilly and Company provides access to all individual participant data collected during the trial, after anonymization, with the exception of pharmacokinetic or genetic data. Data are available to request 6 months after the indication studied has been approved in the USA and the European Union and after primary publication acceptance, whichever is later. No expiration date of data requests is currently set once data are made available. Access is provided after a proposal has been approved by an independent review committee identified for this purpose and after receipt of a signed data sharing agreement. Data and documents, including the study protocol, statistical analysis plan, clinical study report, blank or annotated case report forms, will be provided in a secure data sharing environment. For details on submitting a request, see the instructions provided at www.vivli.org.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Supplementary Information
Below is the link to the electronic supplementary material.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, which permits any non-commercial use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Matsumori, Y., Komori, M., Tanji, Y. et al. Rapid Onset and Sustained Efficacy of Lasmiditan Among Japanese Patients with Migraine: Prespecified Analyses of a Randomized Controlled Trial. Neurol Ther 11, 1721–1734 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40120-022-00403-2
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40120-022-00403-2