Unbound MEDLINE

A sumatriptan iontophoretic transdermal system for the acute treatment of migraine.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE
Gastrointestinal symptoms, such as nausea and vomiting, occur almost universally at one time or another in patients during a migraine attack. One third of patients who experience migraine-related nausea report that this symptom interferes with their ability to take oral medications. The sumatriptan iontophoretic transdermal system (NuPathe Inc., Conshohocken, PA, USA) uses proprietary technology to circumvent the gastrointestinal tract while delivering triptan therapy. This phase III randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial evaluated the efficacy and tolerability of this system for the acute treatment of migraine.
METHODS
Patients were randomized to treat a single moderate-to-severe migraine attack with the sumatriptan iontophoretic transdermal system or placebo. The primary end point was the proportion of patients who were headache pain-free 2 hours after patch activation. Other end points included the proportions of patients who reported headache pain relief, and freedom from nausea, photophobia, and phonophobia; rescue medication use; and tolerability.
RESULTS
Four hundred sixty-nine patients were treated. Significantly more patients treated with the sumatriptan iontophoretic transdermal system compared with placebo experienced freedom from headache pain, nausea, photophobia, and phonophobia 2 hours after patch activation, experienced rapid and sustained headache pain relief, and used less rescue medication. Treatment-emergent adverse events were reported by 50% and 44% of patients treated with the sumatriptan iontophoretic transdermal system and placebo, respectively. Most events were transient mild-to-moderate application-site reactions.
CONCLUSIONS
The sumatriptan iontophoretic transdermal system is effective and well tolerated, and may be particularly useful in patients with migraine-related gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea.

Links

  • Publisher Full Text
  • Authors

    Goldstein J, Smith TR, Pugach N, Griesser J, Sebree T, Pierce M

    Institution

    San Francisco Clinical Research Center, San Francisco, CA 94109, USA. sfhaclin@aol.com

    Source

    Headache 52:9 2012 Oct pg 1402-10

    MeSH

    Adult
    Analgesics
    Double-Blind Method
    Female
    Humans
    Iontophoresis
    Male
    Migraine Disorders
    Sumatriptan
    Transdermal Patch
    Treatment Outcome

    Pub Type(s)

    Clinical Trial, Phase III
    Journal Article
    Randomized Controlled Trial
    Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

    Language

    eng

    PubMed ID

    22694484