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About
This is a United States Department of Defense funded Focused Program study that aims to identify mechanisms and predictors for persistent of post-traumatic headache attributed to mild traumatic brain injury, and identify methods of preventing post-traumatic headache persistence.
The objective of the clinical trial component of the Focused Program is to determine whether intervention with erenumab is an effective treatment for PTH attributed to mTBI.
Full description
The human studies component of this Focused Program includes clinical phenotyping, neurophysiology, molecular and genetic biomarker discovery, brain imaging, and a clinical trial.These data will be utilized to characterize post-traumatic headache and build univariate and multivariate predictive models for post-traumatic headache persistence and for the response to post-traumatic headache treatment. These studies are described in more detail within a separate clinicaltrials.gov record.
The clinical trial is a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled investigation of erenumab for the treatment of post-traumatic headache. Participants will be randomized when PTH has been present for 35-56 days. Follow-up questionnaires, headache diary data, pain threshold results, and brain imaging data will be collected longitudinally during the clinical trial to assess for changes over time and associations of such changes with post-traumatic headache treatment outcomes. Due to slow enrollment, the study was later changed to open label since the estimated total enrollment would be inadequate for making comparisons between the placebo and erenumab groups.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Chronic headache (i.e., at least 15 headache days/month for more than 3 months) within 12 months prior to the mTBI that led to the current PTH, including PPTH, chronic migraine, medication overuse headache, new daily persistent headache, hemicrania continua, chronic tension-type headache
Diminished decision-making capacity that in the investigator's opinion would interfere with the person's ability to provide informed consent and complete study procedures
Started or changed dose of a headache preventive medication within the 3 months prior to screening
Use of onabotulinumtoxinA in the head, neck or face region within 6 months of screening
During the 6 months before screening, use of opioids or barbiturates on an average of at least 4 days per month
Subjects who underwent an intervention or used a device (e.g., nerve blocks, transcranial magnetic stimulation, vagal nerve stimulation, or electrical trigeminal nerve stimulation) for headache within 3 months of screening
History of major psychiatric disorder such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder
History or evidence of any unstable or clinically significant medical condition, that in the opinion of the investigator, would pose a risk to subject safety or interfere with the study evaluation, procedures, or completion
History of positive neuroimaging findings that indicate a moderate or severe TBI
Contraindications to magnetic resonance imaging, including, but not limited to (only an exclusion for patients participating in the brain MRI portion of this research):
Factors that reduce MR image quality and interpretability (only an exclusion for patients participating in the brain MRI portion of this research):
Sensory disorders that in the investigator's opinion might affect perception of cutaneous thermal stimuli (e.g., peripheral neuropathy) (only an exclusion for patients participating in the neurophysiology studies)
Pregnancy
Breastfeeding
History of myocardial infarction, stroke, transient ischemic attack, unstable angina, coronary artery bypass surgery, or other revascularization procedures within 12 months prior to screening.
Not willing to use a reliable form of contraception (for women of childbearing potential) through 16 weeks after the last dose of erenumab. Acceptable methods of birth control include not having intercourse, hormonal birth control methods, intrauterine devices, surgical contraceptive methods, or two barrier methods (each partner must use a barrier method) with spermicide. A reliable form of contraception must be started prior to or at the time of starting the run-in phase. Not being of childbearing potential is defined as any woman who is post-menopausal by history, defined as:
Currently or within 90 days prior to screening: received treatment in another drug study or an investigational device study
Has previously received any CGRP ligand or receptor targeted monoclonal antibody
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
6 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Dani Smith
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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