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Verapamil vs. Sertraline for Vestibular Migraine & Chronic Subjective Dizziness

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Mayo Clinic

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 1

Conditions

Chronic Subjective Dizziness
Vestibular Migraine

Treatments

Drug: Verapamil
Drug: Sertraline

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01669304
12-002814

Details and patient eligibility

About

Vestibular migraine (VM) and chronic subjective dizziness (CSD) commonly cause vertigo, unsteadiness and dizziness. Clinical investigators are studying these illnesses to understand them better. VM and CSD occur together in about 1/3 of patients. That makes it hard to diagnose them accurately and decide what treatments to use. As a result, doctors and patients may be confused about these diagnoses. The goal of this study was use two different medications to tease apart the symptoms of VM and CSD.

Patients who have VM and CSD together were given either verapamil or sertraline for 12 weeks. These medications are used to treat VM and CSD, though they are not approved for this purpose. Verapamil is believed to have stronger effects on symptoms of VM. Sertraline is believed to have stronger effects on symptoms of CSD. By comparing the responses of patients to these two medications, the researchers hoped to learn more about the key features of VM and CSD.

Full description

Chronic dizziness and recurrent vertigo are frequent complaints in primary and specialty medical care settings. Two common causes of these symptoms are vestibular migraine (VM) and chronic subjective dizziness (CSD), which may be seen in up to 25% of patients examined in tertiary neurotology centers. However, VM and CSD are relatively new diagnoses that have not yet been validated. Furthermore, recent research found that they co-exist 30% of the time with overlap in several features. From a clinical standpoint, this makes it difficult to diagnose and treat them well. From a research standpoint, it confounds subject selection for mechanistic investigations.

The primary goal of this study was to dissect VM and CSD in order to identify the key features and clarify the diagnostic criteria of each condition. Subjects diagnosed with coexisting VM-CSD were treated with either verapamil or sertraline. It was hypothesized that a differential treatment response to these two pharmacologic probes would help to tease apart the unique clinical features of VM and CSD and identify risk factors that are shared or separate between the two conditions. It was hoped that the different mechanisms of action of the two study medications might also shed light on the physiologic underpinnings of VM and CSD.

This project was a 14-week, prospective, randomized, double-blind, parallel group, pharmacologic dissection (PD) trial. A 12-week treatment period followed 2 weeks of baseline observation. Patients charted daily headache and vestibular symptoms. VM and CSD symptoms and potential confounds such as anxiety and depression were measured at two week intervals. Data were analyzed for differential and shared treatment effects that align with or oppose current concepts of VM and CSD.

A PD trial uses response to one or more pharmaceutical probes (drugs) to study physiologic mechanisms of illness. A PD trial may provide data to separate overlapping manifestations of comorbid illnesses. This is useful for conditions that lack biomarkers. It also may provide data to identify characteristics of illnesses (symptoms, signs, cellular processes) that are associated with specific pharmacologic mechanisms.

Enrollment

32 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Neurotologic diagnoses of both vestibular migraine and chronic subjective dizziness
  2. All other co-existing medical or psychiatric conditions are stable, and no greater than moderate severity
  3. Able to complete study assessments in person and by phone
  4. Able to travel to Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota for first and last study visits
  5. Willing to avoid pregnancy during study (abstinence or acceptable birth control)

Exclusion criteria

  1. Presence of any other active neurotologic diagnoses
  2. Medical or psychiatric conditions that would preclude or confound study drugs
  3. Use of medications or supplements that would preclude or confound study drugs
  4. Past treatment of headache or dizziness with a full trial of a calcium channel blocker or selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor
  5. Allergy to verapamil or sertraline

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

32 participants in 2 patient groups

Verapamil
Experimental group
Description:
Verapamil extended release oral tablets administered in a flexible dose format ranging from 120 mg to 360 mg daily, as determined by severity of headache and dizziness.
Treatment:
Drug: Verapamil
Sertraline
Experimental group
Description:
Sertraline oral tablets administered in a flexible dose format ranging from 25 mg to 150 mg daily depending on severity of headache and dizziness.
Treatment:
Drug: Sertraline

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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