Conference Coverage

Device impresses for chronic cluster headache attacks


 

REPORTING FROM THE AHS ANNUAL MEETING

Patients speak out about shortcomings of cluster headache treatment

Elsewhere at the meeting, Emmanuelle Schindler, MD, PhD, a neurologist at Yale University in New Haven, Conn., reported on 493 participants in the Clusterbusters Medication Use Survey. The results provided a sobering picture of the shortcomings of current cluster headache treatments from the patient perspective.

Two-thirds of subjects had episodic cluster headache, while the remainder had the chronic form. Roughly 11% of subjects reported limiting adverse events caused by their abortive and/or preventive medications. A similar percentage reported resistance to all approved preventive drugs. Inconsistency of medication efficacy was a common theme. The survey respondents want novel treatments that are safe and effective. And they expressed a wish that more primary care physicians were well informed about cluster headaches; many of the individuals with cluster headache reported difficulty in reaching a knowledgeable headache specialist.

The Pathway CH-2 study was funded by Autonomic Technologies Inc. Dr. Dodick serves as a consultant to that company and numerous others. Dr. Schindler’s survey was funded by Clusterbusters, a nonprofit research organization.

SOURCE: Dodick DW, AHS 2018, Abstract PS112LB.

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