1. Trajectory of treatment response in the child and adolescent migraine prevention (CHAMP) study: A randomized clinical trial
- Author
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Joanne Kacperski, Jon W. Yankey, Leslie L. Korbee, Christopher S. Coffey, James Peugh, Dixie Ecklund, Marielle A. Kabbouche, Andrew D. Hershey, Scott W. Powers, Elizabeth A. Klingner, Leigh A. Chamberlin, Linda Porter, and Brooke L Reidy
- Subjects
Treatment response ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Headache Disorders ,Amitriptyline ,Migraine Disorders ,Placebo ,law.invention ,Child and adolescent ,Double-Blind Method ,Randomized controlled trial ,Topiramate ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,business.industry ,Headache ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Migraine ,Preventive medication ,Physical therapy ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Objective Identify preventive medication treatment response trajectories among youth participating in the Childhood and Adolescent Migraine Prevention study. Methods Data were evaluated from 328 youth (ages 8–17). Childhood and Adolescent Migraine Prevention study participants completed headache diaries during a 28-day baseline period and a 168-day active treatment period during which youth took amitriptyline, topiramate, or placebo. Daily headache occurrence trajectories were established across baseline and active treatment periods using longitudinal hierarchical linear modeling. We tested potential treatment group differences. We also compared final models to trajectory findings from a clinical trial of cognitive behavioral therapy plus amitriptyline for youth with chronic migraine to test for reproducibility. Results Daily headache occurrence showed stability across baseline. Active treatment models revealed decreases in headache frequency that were most notable early in the trial period. Baseline and active treatment models did not differ by treatment group and replicated trajectory cognitive behavioral therapy plus amitriptyline trial findings. Conclusions Replicating headache frequency trajectories across clinical trials provides strong evidence that youth can improve quickly. Given no effect for medication, we need to better understand what drives this clinically meaningful improvement. Results also suggest an expected trajectory of treatment response for use in designing and determining endpoints for future clinical trials. Trial Registration. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01581281
- Published
- 2021
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