Challenges and complexities in designing cluster headache prevention clinical trials: A narrative review

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Challenges and complexities in designing cluster headache prevention clinical trials : A narrative review. / Dodick, David W; Goadsby, Peter J; Ashina, Messoud; Tassorelli, Cristina; Hundemer, Hans-Peter; Bardos, Jennifer N.; Wenzel, Richard; Kemmer, Phebe; Conley, Robert; Martinez, James M.; Oakes, Tina.

I: Headache, Bind 62, Nr. 4, 2022, s. 453-472.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Dodick, DW, Goadsby, PJ, Ashina, M, Tassorelli, C, Hundemer, H-P, Bardos, JN, Wenzel, R, Kemmer, P, Conley, R, Martinez, JM & Oakes, T 2022, 'Challenges and complexities in designing cluster headache prevention clinical trials: A narrative review', Headache, bind 62, nr. 4, s. 453-472. https://doi.org/10.1111/head.14292

APA

Dodick, D. W., Goadsby, P. J., Ashina, M., Tassorelli, C., Hundemer, H-P., Bardos, J. N., Wenzel, R., Kemmer, P., Conley, R., Martinez, J. M., & Oakes, T. (2022). Challenges and complexities in designing cluster headache prevention clinical trials: A narrative review. Headache, 62(4), 453-472. https://doi.org/10.1111/head.14292

Vancouver

Dodick DW, Goadsby PJ, Ashina M, Tassorelli C, Hundemer H-P, Bardos JN o.a. Challenges and complexities in designing cluster headache prevention clinical trials: A narrative review. Headache. 2022;62(4):453-472. https://doi.org/10.1111/head.14292

Author

Dodick, David W ; Goadsby, Peter J ; Ashina, Messoud ; Tassorelli, Cristina ; Hundemer, Hans-Peter ; Bardos, Jennifer N. ; Wenzel, Richard ; Kemmer, Phebe ; Conley, Robert ; Martinez, James M. ; Oakes, Tina. / Challenges and complexities in designing cluster headache prevention clinical trials : A narrative review. I: Headache. 2022 ; Bind 62, Nr. 4. s. 453-472.

Bibtex

@article{d9dc40b69be9493d8cbb278df9669d23,
title = "Challenges and complexities in designing cluster headache prevention clinical trials: A narrative review",
abstract = "Objective: To provide a review of challenges in clinical trials for the preventive treatment of cluster headache (CH) and highlight considerations for future studies. Background: Current guidelines for preventive treatment of CH are largely based on off-label therapies supported by a limited number of small randomized controlled trials. Guidelines for clinical trial design for CH treatments from the International Headache Society were last issued in 1995. Methods/Results: Randomized controlled clinical trials were identified in the European and/or United States clinical trial registries with a search term of “cluster headache,” and manually reviewed. Cumulatively, there were 27 unique placebo-controlled prevention trials for episodic and/or chronic CH, of which 12 were either ongoing, not yet recruiting, or the status was unknown. Of the remaining 15 trials, 5 were terminated early and 7 of the 10 completed trials enrolled fewer patients than planned or did not report the planned sample size. A systematic search of PubMed was also utilized to identify published manuscripts reporting results from placebo-controlled preventive trials of CH. This search yielded 16 publications, of which 7 were registered. Through critical review of trial data and published manuscripts, challenges and complexities encountered in clinical trials for the preventive treatment of CH were identified. For example, the excruciating pain associated with CH demands a suitably limited baseline duration, rapid treatment efficacy onset, and poses a specific issue regarding duration of investigational treatment period and length of exposure to placebo. In episodic CH, spontaneous remission as part of natural history, and the unpredictability and irregularity of cluster periods across patients present additional key challenges. Conclusions: Optimal CH trial design should balance sound methodology to demonstrate efficacy of a potential treatment with patient needs and the natural history of the disease, including unique outcome measures and endpoint timings for chronic versus episodic CH.",
keywords = "chronic cluster headache, clinical trial design, episodic cluster headache",
author = "Dodick, {David W} and Goadsby, {Peter J} and Messoud Ashina and Cristina Tassorelli and Hans-Peter Hundemer and Bardos, {Jennifer N.} and Richard Wenzel and Phebe Kemmer and Robert Conley and Martinez, {James M.} and Tina Oakes",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 Eli Lilly and Company. Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Headache Society.",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1111/head.14292",
language = "English",
volume = "62",
pages = "453--472",
journal = "Headache",
issn = "0017-8748",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Challenges and complexities in designing cluster headache prevention clinical trials

T2 - A narrative review

AU - Dodick, David W

AU - Goadsby, Peter J

AU - Ashina, Messoud

AU - Tassorelli, Cristina

AU - Hundemer, Hans-Peter

AU - Bardos, Jennifer N.

AU - Wenzel, Richard

AU - Kemmer, Phebe

AU - Conley, Robert

AU - Martinez, James M.

AU - Oakes, Tina

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 Eli Lilly and Company. Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Headache Society.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Objective: To provide a review of challenges in clinical trials for the preventive treatment of cluster headache (CH) and highlight considerations for future studies. Background: Current guidelines for preventive treatment of CH are largely based on off-label therapies supported by a limited number of small randomized controlled trials. Guidelines for clinical trial design for CH treatments from the International Headache Society were last issued in 1995. Methods/Results: Randomized controlled clinical trials were identified in the European and/or United States clinical trial registries with a search term of “cluster headache,” and manually reviewed. Cumulatively, there were 27 unique placebo-controlled prevention trials for episodic and/or chronic CH, of which 12 were either ongoing, not yet recruiting, or the status was unknown. Of the remaining 15 trials, 5 were terminated early and 7 of the 10 completed trials enrolled fewer patients than planned or did not report the planned sample size. A systematic search of PubMed was also utilized to identify published manuscripts reporting results from placebo-controlled preventive trials of CH. This search yielded 16 publications, of which 7 were registered. Through critical review of trial data and published manuscripts, challenges and complexities encountered in clinical trials for the preventive treatment of CH were identified. For example, the excruciating pain associated with CH demands a suitably limited baseline duration, rapid treatment efficacy onset, and poses a specific issue regarding duration of investigational treatment period and length of exposure to placebo. In episodic CH, spontaneous remission as part of natural history, and the unpredictability and irregularity of cluster periods across patients present additional key challenges. Conclusions: Optimal CH trial design should balance sound methodology to demonstrate efficacy of a potential treatment with patient needs and the natural history of the disease, including unique outcome measures and endpoint timings for chronic versus episodic CH.

AB - Objective: To provide a review of challenges in clinical trials for the preventive treatment of cluster headache (CH) and highlight considerations for future studies. Background: Current guidelines for preventive treatment of CH are largely based on off-label therapies supported by a limited number of small randomized controlled trials. Guidelines for clinical trial design for CH treatments from the International Headache Society were last issued in 1995. Methods/Results: Randomized controlled clinical trials were identified in the European and/or United States clinical trial registries with a search term of “cluster headache,” and manually reviewed. Cumulatively, there were 27 unique placebo-controlled prevention trials for episodic and/or chronic CH, of which 12 were either ongoing, not yet recruiting, or the status was unknown. Of the remaining 15 trials, 5 were terminated early and 7 of the 10 completed trials enrolled fewer patients than planned or did not report the planned sample size. A systematic search of PubMed was also utilized to identify published manuscripts reporting results from placebo-controlled preventive trials of CH. This search yielded 16 publications, of which 7 were registered. Through critical review of trial data and published manuscripts, challenges and complexities encountered in clinical trials for the preventive treatment of CH were identified. For example, the excruciating pain associated with CH demands a suitably limited baseline duration, rapid treatment efficacy onset, and poses a specific issue regarding duration of investigational treatment period and length of exposure to placebo. In episodic CH, spontaneous remission as part of natural history, and the unpredictability and irregularity of cluster periods across patients present additional key challenges. Conclusions: Optimal CH trial design should balance sound methodology to demonstrate efficacy of a potential treatment with patient needs and the natural history of the disease, including unique outcome measures and endpoint timings for chronic versus episodic CH.

KW - chronic cluster headache

KW - clinical trial design

KW - episodic cluster headache

U2 - 10.1111/head.14292

DO - 10.1111/head.14292

M3 - Review

C2 - 35363381

AN - SCOPUS:85127425975

VL - 62

SP - 453

EP - 472

JO - Headache

JF - Headache

SN - 0017-8748

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 344425688