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About
The purpose of this study is to determine if prazosin is more effective than placebo in decreasing frequency, severity, disability, and other negative effects of headaches related to mild traumatic brain injury in Service Members and Veterans.
Full description
Headaches following combat-related post-concussive injury are common, and in some patients can increase in frequency and severity to become very debilitating. Posttraumatic headaches (PTHAs), particularly those following blast-related head injury, can be resistant to standard headache therapies. The objective of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the medication prazosin as a prophylactic (preventive) agent in treating combat-related PTHAs. Prazosin is a generic drug originally marketed over 30 years ago as a treatment for high blood pressure. It has subsequently been found to be safe and effective for treating other problems, including most recently posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and disrupted sleep in active duty Iraq/Afghanistan Service Members and Veterans. In preliminary studies, prazosin has also been found to substantially reduce the intensity and frequency of PTHAs in this population. This finding is the motivation behind this study.
The investigators' hypotheses are (1) that prazosin will be more effective than placebo in easing the effects of chronic PTHAs, including headache frequency, duration, severity, use of abortive/analgesic medications, and disability caused, and (2) that improvement in headache parameters will be associated with improvement in sleep quality, PTSD symptom severity, mood, cognition, health-related quality of life, and global clinical status, and with moderation of alcohol consumption.
The total trial length is 22 - 24 weeks. Following an initial clinic visit to determine preliminary study eligibility, there will be a 4-week pre-treatment preliminary screening period, during which participants will keep a daily headache diary. The purpose of this is to confirm eligibility for randomization per inclusion/exclusion criteria and to collect baseline data for headache-related outcome measures. Participants confirmed to be eligible to continue in the study will then have a one-week sleep evaluation including actigraphy and keeping a daily sleep diary. This will be followed by a baseline study visit, during which baseline data for secondary outcome measures will be collected using validated structured self-reports and clinician interviews. Participants will be randomized 2:1 to prazosin or placebo, and the study drug dose will be gradually titrated over a 5 to 7-week period to 5 mg in the morning and 20 mg in the evening or the maximum tolerated dose. The dose titration will be followed by 12 weeks at steady-dose. For the last week of the steady-dose phase, participants will repeat the sleep evaluation. Participants will keep a headache log through the duration of the study. Results will be analyzed using standard statistical techniques.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Veterans or active duty service members aged 18 or older of either gender
Good general health
History of blast and/or impact head/neck trauma meeting DVBIC criteria for mild TBI, i.e., injury as manifested by at least one of the following:
Headaches that started within 3 months of a head/neck injury or pre-existing headaches that markedly worsened (by a two-fold or greater increase in frequency and/or severity) within 3 months of a head/neck injury. Headaches must either 1) last 4 or more hours a day and reach a moderate to severe intensity at any point during the headache or 2) may be of any severity or duration if the participant uses a medication or other agent in an effort to stop the headache. Headaches meeting these criteria must have been present on average at least 8 days per 4-week period over the 3 months preceding study enrollment.
Comorbid PTSD or other anxiety disorder is not exclusionary.
Fluency in English is required.
Persons of all races and ethnicities are eligible.
Female participants must agree to abstain from sexual relations that could result in pregnancy or use a reliable form of birth control during the study.
Continued use of prophylactic migraine medication other than the study drug is permissible if the participant has been on a stable dose for at least 4 weeks prior to the preliminary screening period and intends to continue the medication for the duration of the trial.
Exclusion criteria
Medication Exclusions:
Please note that the following two exclusions related to prazosin use had been changed in the study protocol as of September 2021 but were inadvertently not updated on the ClinicalTrials.gov website. The previous exclusion related to prazosin use prior to study enrollment was for a dose up to 2 mg. The change allows a dose up to 4 mg. This change, made based on clinical experience for the purpose of facilitating recruitment, did not adversely affect patient safety or data integrity.
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89 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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