Scottish Guideline for Pharmacological management of migraine

Published On 2018-07-04 13:31 GMT   |   Update On 2018-07-04 13:31 GMT

Migraine is the most commonly severe form of a primary headache with a global prevalence of around one in seven people. The Global Burden of Disease study ranks migraine as the seventh most common cause of disability worldwide, rising to the third most common cause in the under the 50s. Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network has come out with National Guideline for Pharmacological management of a migraine that has been accredited by NICE.


Key Recommendations -

Acute Therapy

  • When starting acute treatment, healthcare professionals should warn patients about the risk of developing a medication‑overuse headache.


Aspirin



  • Aspirin (900 mg) is recommended as first‑line treatment for patients with an acute migraine

  • Aspirin, in doses for a migraine, is not an analgesic of choice during pregnancy and should not be used in the third trimester of pregnancy


Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs



  • Ibuprofen (400 mg) is recommended as first-line treatment for patients with an acute migraine. If ineffective, the dose should be increased to 600 mg


Paracetamol



  • Paracetamol (1000 mg) can be considered for treatment of patients with an acute migraine who are unable to take other acute therapies

  • Due to its safety profile, paracetamol is the first choice for the short‑term relief of mild to a moderate headache during any trimester of pregnancy


Antiemetics



  • Metoclopramide (10 mg) or prochlorperazine (10 mg) can be considered in the treatment of a headache in patients with an acute migraine. They can be used either as an oral or parenteral formulation depending on presentation and setting

  • Metoclopramide (10 mg) or prochlorperazine (10 mg) should be considered for patients presenting with migraine-associated symptoms of nausea or vomiting. They can be used either as an oral or parenteral formulation depending on presentation and setting

  • Metoclopramide should not be used regularly due to the risk of extrapyramidal side-effects


Triptans



  • Triptans are recommended as first‑line treatment for patients with an acute migraine. The first choice is sumatriptan (50–100 mg), but others should be offered if sumatriptan fails

  • In patients with severe acute migraine or early vomiting, nasal zolmitriptan or subcutaneous sumatriptan should be considered

  • Triptans are recommended for the treatment of patients with an acute migraine associated with menstruation

  • Sumatriptan can be considered for treatment of an acute migraine in pregnant women in all stages of pregnancy. The risks associated with use should be discussed before commencing treatment


Combination therapies



  • Combination therapy using sumatriptan (50–85 mg) and naproxen (500 mg) should be considered for the treatment of patients with an acute migraine.


Preventive Therapy



Beta-blockers



  • Propranolol (80–160 mg daily) is recommended as a first-line prophylactic treatment for patients with an episodic or a chronic migraine


Topiramate



  • Topiramate (50–100 mg daily) is recommended as a prophylactic treatment for patients with an episodic or a chronic migraine

  • Before commencing treatment women who may become pregnant should be advised of the associated risks of topiramate during pregnancy, the need to use effective contraception and the need to seek further advice on migraine prophylaxis if pregnant or planning a pregnancy


Tricyclic antidepressants



  • Amitriptyline (25–150 mg at night) should be considered as a prophylactic treatment for patients with an episodic or a chronic migraine

  • In patients who cannot tolerate amitriptyline a less sedating tricyclic antidepressant should be considered


Candesartan



  • Candesartan (16 mg daily) can be considered as a prophylactic treatment for patients with an episodic or a chronic migraine


Sodium valproate



  • Sodium valproate (400–1500 mg daily) can be considered as a prophylactic treatment for patients with an episodic or a chronic migraine

  • Prescribers should be aware that sodium valproate is associated with an increased risk of fetal malformations and poorer cognitive outcomes in children exposed to valproate in utero. For women who may become pregnant sodium valproate should only be considered as a prophylactic treatment when:

    • other treatment options have been exhausted

    • patients are using adequate contraception



  • Before commencing treatment women should be informed of:

    • the risks associated with taking valproate during pregnancy

    • the risk that potentially harmful exposure to valproate may occur before a woman is aware she is pregnant

    • the need to use effective contraception

    • the need to seek further advice on migraine prophylaxis if pregnant or planning a pregnancy



  • When prescribing sodium valproate for women who may become pregnant care must be exercised.


Calcium channel blockers



  • Flunarizine (10 mg daily) should be considered as a prophylactic treatment for patients with an episodic or a chronic migraine


Gabapentin



  • Gabapentin should not be considered as a prophylactic treatment for patients with an episodic or a chronic migraine


Botulinum toxin A



  • Botulinum toxin A is not recommended for the prophylactic treatment of patients with an episodic migraine

  • Botulinum toxin A is recommended for the prophylactic treatment of patients with a chronic migraine where medication overuse has been addressed and patients have been appropriately treated with three or more oral migraine prophylactic treatments

  • Botulinum toxin A should only be administered by appropriately trained individuals under the supervision of a headache clinic or the local neurology service


Menstrual migraine prophylaxis



  • Frovatriptan (2.5 mg twice daily) should be considered as a prophylactic treatment in women with a perimenstrual migraine from two days before until three days after bleeding starts

  • Zolmitriptan (2.5 mg three times daily) or naratriptan (2.5 mg twice daily) can be considered as alternatives to frovatriptan as the prophylactic treatment in women with a perimenstrual migraine from two days before until three days after bleeding starts

  • Women with a menstrual-related migraine who are using triptans at other times of the month should be advised that additional perimenstrual prophylaxis increases the risk of developing medication overuse headache.


A medication-overuse headache




  • In patients overusing acute treatment, medication overuse should be addressed

  • The choice of strategy to address medication overuse should be tailored to the individual patient and may be influenced by comorbidities. Strategies include:

    • abrupt withdrawal alone and preventative treatment may then be considered after a delay

    • abrupt withdrawal and immediately starting preventative treatment

    • starting a preventative treatment without withdrawal



  • Consider withdrawing regular opioids gradually

  • Prednisolone should not be used routinely in the management of patients with a medication-overuse headache.


For full guideline log on to :

http://www.sign.ac.uk/assets/sign155.pdf
Article Source : With inputs from Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN)

Disclaimer: This site is primarily intended for healthcare professionals. Any content/information on this website does not replace the advice of medical and/or health professionals and should not be construed as medical/diagnostic advice/endorsement or prescription. Use of this site is subject to our terms of use, privacy policy, advertisement policy. © 2020 Minerva Medical Treatment Pvt Ltd

Our comments section is governed by our Comments Policy . By posting comments at Medical Dialogues you automatically agree with our Comments Policy , Terms And Conditions and Privacy Policy .

Similar News

NICE Guidelines on Latent TB