Introduction

Migraine is a particularly frequent disease in women of fertile age, in whom it usually occurs in the perimenstrual period [1]. Menstrually related migraine (MRM) is associated with substantial disability and attacks are more severe, longer in duration, and have a poorer response to analgesics than non-menstrual ones [2]. Drug prophylaxis may be useful for menstrual migraine [3]. However, since this type of migraine is characterized by relatively low attack frequency, acute treatment may be more indicated [4].

Triptans proved to be the most effective specific acute antimigraine medications and are preferable for MRM treatment in view of its difficult-to-treat nature [4, 5]. Prospective, randomized, controlled trials as well as retrospective analyses and open label studies support the use of triptans as acute therapy for menstrual migraine [5]. Sumatriptan has been shown to be well tolerated and effective in providing pain relief in MRM when administered in the mild pain phase, also in combination with analgesics [612]. Second generation triptans such as zolmitriptan [1315], naratriptan [16], rizatriptan [1721] and more recently almotriptan [14, 22] and frovatriptan [23] have been also successfully tested, their different pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic features as respect to sumatriptan potentially rendering them particularly suitable for treating menstrual migraine. Recent guidelines now recommend sumatriptan 50 and 100 mg or rizatriptan 10 mg for acute treatment of MRM, and frovatriptan 2.5 mg or naratriptan 1 mg twice daily for preventive treatment of this condition [4, 24].

Though there is presently strong evidence of the preventive efficacy of frovatriptan [2528], there is less information on its efficacy in treating acute MRM attacks of menstrual migraine. In addition, there are presently no head-to-head studies comparing efficacy of frovatriptan with that of another second generation triptan in menstrual migraineurs.

In order to fill this gap we planned an analysis of a subgroup of MRM sufferers who participated in a recently published head-to-head multicenter, randomized, double blind, cross-over clinical trial comparing the efficacy of frovatriptan versus zolmitriptan [29]. Results of such a subgroup analysis are reported in the present paper.

Methods

Study population

The main study foresaw inclusion of subjects of both genders, aged 18–65 years, with a current history of migraine with or without aura, according to International Headache Society (IHS) 2004 criteria, and with at least one, but no more than six migraine attacks per month for 6 months prior to entering the study [29, 30]. Details of study design, including exclusion criteria, are available from the main study publication [29]. In the present analysis women with MRM were selected. This condition was defined according to IHS criteria as migraine without aura attacks in a menstruating woman, occurring on day 1 ± 2 (namely days −2 to +3) of menstruation in at least two out of three menstrual cycles and additionally at other times of the cycle [30].

Study design

The study design has been extensively reported in a previous publication [29]. Briefly, this was a multicenter, randomized, double blind, cross-over study, including 14 Italian centers (see Appendix). Each patient received frovatriptan 2.5 mg or zolmitriptan 2.5 mg in a randomized sequence: after treating three episodes of migraine in no more than 3 months with the first treatment, the patient had to switch to the other treatment. Subjects were encouraged to treat one to three attacks for a maximum period of 6 months and to visit the center three times. Subjects having no migraine episodes during one of the two observation periods were excluded from the study.

Data analysis

This analysis was carried out in all normally menstruating women randomized to any of the two treatment sequences, having not positively refused to receive either study treatment and having treated at least one episode of menstrual migraine with both medications (intention-to-treat population).

Study endpoints were (1) the number of pain-relief episodes at 2 and 24 h; (2) the decrease in migraine intensity from severe or moderate to mild or none at 2 and 24 h; (3) the number of pain-free episodes at 2 and 24 h (absence of migraine episodes at 2 and 24 h after intake of one dose of study drug ± rescue medication]; (4) recurrence, defined as an episode of migraine occurring 24 h after the previous episode, with a migraine-free period between the two attacks.

Analysis of pain-free episodes was carried out also according to baseline headache intensity (mild, moderate or severe). Frequency of pain-free and pain-relief episodes was also assessed and compared between MRM and non-MRM attacks.

Continuous variables were summarized by computing average values and standard deviation (SD), while categorical variables by computing the absolute value and the frequency (as percentage). Endpoints were compared between groups by generalized estimating equation analysis. Kaplan–Meyer curves for cumulative hazard of recurrence over the 48 h were also drawn. P value refers to the statistical significance of between-treatment difference. The level of statistical significance was kept at 0.05 throughout the whole study.

Results

The main study population consisted of 107 subjects, of which 85 women [29]. Overall 76 out of the 85 women had a regular menstrual cycle and were thus included in this analysis.

Average subjects’ age was 34 ± 8 years, age at onset of migraine was 17 ± 5 years, proportion of migraine attack duration >2 days was 20% and average MIDAS score was 22 ± 18. No statistically significant differences were observed between the main study and MRM subgroup population.

Overall efficacy of study drugs

A total of 73 attacks (32% of all attacks) classified as MRM were treated with frovatriptan and 65 (30%) with zolmitriptan.

Rate of pain-relief episodes at 2 h was similar (p = NS) between frovatriptan (52%) and zolmitriptan (53%). The same figure applied to the rate of pain relief at 24 h (83% frovatriptan vs. 82% zolmitriptan, p = NS). Also the rate of pain-free episodes at 2 and 24 h did not differ between the two treatment groups (22 and 74% frovatriptan vs. 26 and 69% zolmitriptan; p = NS for both) (Table 1).

Table 1 Results for the comparison of study endpoints between the two treatment groups

Conversely, the risk of recurrence over the 24 h was significantly (p < 0.05) lower under frovatriptan than under zolmitriptan (15 vs. 22%). This was the case also when recurrence was expressed as cumulative hazard ratio over the observation period (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1
figure 1

Cumulative hazard of recurrence over the 24 h during treatment with frovatriptan (continuous line) or zolmitriptan (dashed line) in the 76 women with MRM

Efficacy of study drugs according to baseline migraine intensity

Most of the treated attacks had a baseline moderate or severe intensity. In these attacks the rates of pain free at 2 or 24 h were slightly larger in frovatriptan- than in zolmitriptan-treated patients, especially at 2 h (Table 2).

Table 2 Pain-free episodes at 2 and 24 h according to baseline headache intensity in the two treatment groups

MRM and non-MRM attacks

Table 3 shows the number and proportion of pain-free and pain-relief episodes 2 and 24 h after frovatriptan intake for the 73 attacks related to and for the 156 attacks unrelated to the menstrual cycle. Frequency of pain relief at 2 and 24 h was 52 and 83% in menstrually related attacks and 63 and 90% in non-menstrually related attacks, with no statistically significant difference between the two type of migraine (p = NS). Similarly, the rate of pain-free episodes at 2 and 24 h was 22 and 74% in MRM and 28 and 81% in non-MRM (p = NS).

Table 3 Pain-free and pain-relief episodes at 2 and 24 h in MRM (n = 73) and non-MRM (n = 156) attacks treated with frovatriptan

Discussion

In this analysis acute treatment of MRM with frovatriptan and zolmitriptan resulted in similar proportions of pain-relief episodes at 2 and 24 h and of pain-free episodes at 2 and 24 h, indicating a superimposable efficacy of the two triptans. However, as respect to zolmitriptan, frovatriptan showed lower rates of headache recurrence over the 24 h. These differences in efficacy between the two study drugs may be largely attributable to the different pharmacokinetics of the two compounds. Zolmitriptan has a slightly shorter time to maximum concentration than frovatriptan (1.5 h vs. 2–4 h), but frovatriptan has a longer half-life than zolmitriptan (25–26 h vs. 3 h), which might explain the same frequencies of pain-relief and pain-free episodes with the two study drugs and why frovatriptan, unlike zolmitriptan, greatly reduced the risk of migraine recurrence [3133]. Interestingly, frovatriptan showed a similar efficacy in MRM and non-MRM episodes, this being particularly important since MRM attacks are usually longer lasting, more severe and more difficult to treat than non-menstrually related ones.

This is the first study proving the efficacy of frovatriptan as acute treatment of MRM. The finding adds to and completes that of previous efficacy studies of frovatriptan as intermittent preventive therapy for menstrual migraine: frovatriptan started 2 days before the expected onset of headache and continued for 6 days, was always found superior to placebo in reducing the frequency of menstrual migraine. A randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled study involving 410 women showed a headache incidence of only 8% when frovatriptan was given at dosage of 2.5 mg twice-daily and of 31% when given once-daily, while the incidence was 58% under placebo [26]. A post-hoc analysis of a randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled study in a population of 179 women experiencing MRM showed a significantly less prevalence of this condition with frovatriptan 2.5 mg twice (38%) or once-daily (51%) than with placebo (67%) [27]. These latter results are in line with those of a previous randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of the same authors carried out in 546 women migraineurs [28].

As regards zolmitriptan, some evidence as acute treatment of menstrual migraine is available from the literature and thus a comparison may be inferred from previous studies. In published studies pain relief at 2 h with zolmitriptan ranged between 48 and 69% [1315], pain free at 2 h between 28 and 41% [13, 14] and recurrence at 24 h between 29 and 35% [13, 14]: in our study the corresponding figures for zolmitriptan were very similar with respect to pain relief at 2 h (53%) and slightly lower for pain free at 2 h (26%) and recurrence at 24 h (22%). These differences might be attributed to differences in study design, patients’ characteristics and dose of zolmitriptan employed.

This is also the first direct comparison study between frovatriptan and another triptan in MRM. Our study and a comparison study between almotriptan and zolmitriptan [14] are the only two available head-to-head double-blind, randomized studies comparing the efficacy of two triptans in MRM. Though both studies share the limitations of post-hoc analysis, they are useful because no such prospective studies on triptans in menstrual migraine have yet been carried out. Limitations of our study are at least partially contrasted by the large number of subjects included in the analysis, approximating two-third of those of the main study. In addition, baseline characteristic of our subgroup of migraineurs were quite similar to those of the main study population and the results for the efficacy endpoints explored and for frovatriptan were not different for MRM and non-MRM attacks [29]. We also limited as much as possible the number of endpoints and analyses, and the study assumptions, considering this subgroup analysis as a starting point for subsequent clinical trials to confirm or refute the finding, rather than being viewed as a definitive result.

Thus, the good sustained relief shown by frovatriptan in our study, seems to support indication of frovatriptan not only, as previously suggested, for preventive treatment of MRM [24], but also for managing the acute attack. Though frovatriptan and zolmitriptan showed a similar efficacy in the immediate, the sustained analgesic effect of frovatriptan supported by a lesser risk of recurrence makes this drug the best choice for those patients with long-duration or recurrent migraine attacks [34, 35].

Conclusions

Our analysis of data from a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, head-to-head study suggests that frovatriptan and zolmitriptan are similarly effective in the immediate treatment of women with MRM. The study provides the first evidence that frovatriptan is superior to zolmitriptan in reducing recurrence in menstrual migraine patients, showing a better sustained relief.