Early treatment with sumatriptan prevents PACAP38-induced migraine: A randomised clinical trial.
Nita Katarina Frifelt WienholtzCasper Emil ChristensenDitte Georgina ZhangHande CoskunHashmat GhanizadaMohammad Al-Mahdi Al-KaragholiJens HannibalAlexander EgebergJacob P ThyssenMessoud AshinaPublished in: Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache (2021)
Of 37 patients enrolled, 26 (70.3%) completed the study and were included in analyses. Of the 26 patients, four (15%) developed a PACAP38-induced migraine attack on sumatriptan and 11 patients (42%) on placebo (p = 0.016). There were no differences in area under the curve for headache intensity between sumatriptan (mean AUC 532) and placebo (mean AUC 779) (p = 0.35). Sumatriptan significantly constricted the PACAP38-dilated superficial temporal artery immediately after infusion (T30) compared with infusion of placebo (p < 0.001).Conclusions and relevance: Early treatment with intravenously administered sumatriptan prevented PACAP38-induced migraine. Prevention of migraine attacks was associated with vasoconstriction by sumatriptan in the earliest phases of PACAP provocation. These results suggest that sumatriptan prevents PACAP38-induced migraine by modulation of nociceptive transmission within the trigeminovascular system.Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03881644).