Literature Review

Oral steroids benefit patients with cluster headache


 

Adjunctive oral prednisone appears to significantly reduce cluster headache attacks, new research shows. Results of the multicenter, randomized, double-blind trial show that patients who received the steroid had 25% fewer attacks in the first week of therapy, compared with their counterparts who received placebo.

In addition, more than a third of patients in the prednisone group were pain free, and for almost half, headache frequency was reduced by at least 50% at day 7 of treatment.

These findings provide clear evidence that prednisone, in conjunction with the use of verapamil, is effective in cluster headache, said lead author Mark Obermann, MD, director, Center for Neurology, Asklepios Hospitals Seesen (Germany), and associate professor, University of Duisburg-Essen (Germany).

The key message, he added, is that all patients with cluster headache should receive prednisone at the start of an episode.

The study was published online Nov. 24 in the Lancet Neurology.

‘Suicide headaches’

Cluster headaches are intense unilateral attacks of facial and head pain. They last 15-180 minutes and predominantly affect men. They are accompanied by trigeminal autonomic symptoms and are extremely painful. “They’re referred to as ‘suicide headaches’ because the pain is so severe that patients often report they think about killing themselves to get rid of the pain,” said Dr. Obermann.

The cause is unclear, although there is some evidence that the hypothalamus is involved. The headaches sometimes follow a “strict circadian pattern,” said Dr. Obermann. He noted that the attacks might occur over a few weeks or months and then not return for months or even years.

An estimated 1 in 1,000 people experience cluster headache, but the condition is underrecognized, and research is scarce and poorly funded. Previous research does show that the calcium channel blocker verapamil, which is used to treat high blood pressure, is effective in cluster headache. However, it takes about 14 days to work and has to be slowly titrated because of cardiac side effects, said Dr. Obermann. For these reasons, international guidelines recommend initiating short-term preventive treatment with corticosteroids to suppress, or at least lessen, cluster headache attacks until long-term prevention is effective.

Although some clinicians treat cluster headaches with corticosteroids, others don’t because of a lack of evidence that shows they are effective. “There’s no evidence whatsoever on what the correct dose is or whether it helps at all. This is the gap we wanted to close,” said Dr. Obermann.

The study included 116 adult patients with cluster headache from 10 centers who were experiencing a cluster headache episode and were not taking prophylactic medication.

The trial only included patients who had an attack within 30 days of their current episode. The investigators included this restriction to reduce the possibility of spontaneous remission, which is “a big problem” in cluster headache trials, he said. To confirm that episodes were cluster headache attacks, patients were also required to have moderate to severe pain, indicated by a score of at least 5 on a numerical rating scale in which 0 indicates no pain and 10 indicates the worse imaginable pain.

Participants were allowed to use treatments for acute attack, but these therapies were limited to triptans, high-flow oxygen, intranasal lidocaine, ergotamine, and oral analgesics.

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