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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
311C90 (
Zomig
; zolmitriptan) is a novel, selective serotonin (5HT)1B/1D receptor agonist with both central and peripheral activity, now in late-stage clinical development for acute oral treatment of migraine. Several studies have demonstrated the tolerability and efficacy of 311C90 in the treatment of a single migraine headache. The objectives of this open-label study were to assess the tolerability and efficacy of repeated doses of 5 mg of 311C90 for acute treatment of multiple attacks for up to 1 year. Patients were allowed to treat as many migraine headaches (mild, moderate, or severe) as desired with an initial dose. A second 5-mg dose could be used to treat recurrence should it develop. Safety assessments included ECG, the frequency, intensity, and duration of adverse experiences, and routine hematology, urinalysis, and clinical chemistry parameters. Efficacy assessments included
headache
severity at 2 hours (i.e., severe, moderate, mild, or none), the proportion of patients pain-free at 2 hours, the use of a second tablet to treat
headache
recurrence if it developed, and the consistency of these findings over time. The efficacy profile and the nature/incidence of adverse events reported appear to be consistent with previous 311C90 studies. The dosing regimen was well tolerated during multiple exposures. Notably,
headache
response rates were consistently good after both initial and repeated exposure (> 80% across 1 to 30 attacks). For 67% of patients who treated at least five attacks, 311C90 was effective 80 to 100% of the time.
...
PMID:311C90: long-term efficacy and tolerability profile for the acute treatment of migraine. International 311C90 Long-Term Study Group. 907 Dec 67
Members of the new class of antimigraine compounds, 5HT1B/1D agonists, as well as ergotamine, may cause vasoconstriction through stimulation of 5HT receptors on peripheral vessels. The cardiovascular effects of 20 mg oral zolmitriptan (
Zomig
, formerly 311C90), 2 mg oral ergotamine and the combination were assessed in a randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study in 12 healthy subjects. Pharmacodynamic measures included oscillometric blood pressure, systolic blood pressure at the toe and arm using a strain gauge technique, stroke volume and cardiac output using bioimpedance cardiography, high-resolution ultrasound to measure brachial arterial diameter and a novel Doppler method to measure blood flow velocity. Both drugs produced small degrees of peripheral vasoconstriction, including increases in diastolic blood pressure and blood flow velocity and decreases in arterial diameter and toe-arm systolic pressure gradient. These effects were generally additive with the combination but of no clinical importance. There were no significant changes in cardiac output, stroke volume heart rate or ECG. Zolmitriptan, at eight times the likely therapeutic dose, was generally well tolerated both alone and in combination with ergotamine. Ergotamine had no clinically important effects on zolmitriptan pharmacokinetics.
Cephalalgia
1997 Oct
PMID:Peripheral vascular effects and pharmacokinetics of the antimigraine compound, zolmitriptan, in combination with oral ergotamine in healthy volunteers. 935 Mar 83
This study investigated the efficacy of zolmitriptan (
Zomig
, formerly 311C90) in acute migraine therapy. Patients with a history of migraine were randomized in a double-blind, multicenter, placebo-controlled, dose range-finding study of oral zolmitriptan 1, 2.5, 5, or 10 mg versus placebo for the treatment of a severe or moderate migraine headache. Patients with persistent or recurrent
headache
4 to 24 hours after the initial dose, who did not take escape medication, were eligible to receive a second blinded dose of either zolmitriptan or placebo. Of 1,144 patients treated, 999 evaluable patients completed the study. The
headache
response rates with zolmitriptan doses > or = 2.5 mg were 44 to 51% at 1 hour, 65 to 67% at 2 hours, and 75 to 78% at 4 hours (all significantly superior to placebo). Also, zolmitriptan effectively relieved migraine-associated symptoms such as nausea, photophobia and phonophobia, and reduced activity impairment. Rates of
headache
recurrence,
headache
persistence, and use of escape medication were lower with zolmitriptan doses > or = 2.5 mg than with placebo. In patients with persistent or recurrent
headache
, a second zolmitriptan dose effectively treated both
headache
and nonheadache symptoms. Zolmitriptan was well tolerated, with a lower incidence of adverse events being reported with doses < or = 2.5 mg than with those > or = 5 mg. Zolmitriptan is a well tolerated and effective acute migraine therapy providing rapid relief of migraine headache within 1 hour. A clear dose-response relationship between efficacy and tolerability suggests that 2.5 mg is the optimal initial dose for the acute treatment of a migraine attack.
...
PMID:Optimizing the dose of zolmitriptan (Zomig, 311C90) for the acute treatment of migraine. A multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose range-finding study. The 017 Clinical Trial Study Group. 937 90
Previous studies demonstrated that zolmitriptan at doses of 1 to 25 mg was highly effective in treating acute migraine attacks. The 2.5-mg dose had a favorable therapeutic effect with high efficacy and good tolerability. The objective of this study was to further evaluate the efficacy of a single 2.5-mg dose of zolmitriptan (
Zomig
, formerly known as 311C90) for acute treatment of a single moderate or severe migraine attack. The study was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial. Female and male patients, 12 to 65 years old, with migraine (with or without aura) for > or = 1 year, one to six migraines per month, and age at onset < 50 years were included; 327 patients were screened and randomized to receive either zolmitriptan (n = 219) or placebo (n = 108). Patients treated a single moderate or severe migraine headache with 2.5 mg zolmitriptan or placebo and recorded clinical efficacy and adverse events on a diary form.
Headache
response at 2 hours was 62% for zolmitriptan compared with 36% for placebo (p < 0.001); at 4 hours,
headache
response was 70% with zolmitriptan and 37% with placebo (p < 0.001).
Headache
recurrence in patients treated with 2.5 mg zolmitriptan was 22% (versus placebo 30%). The
headache
response at 4 hours, pain-free rate, and response rate of nonheadache symptoms favored zolmitriptan over placebo. No serious adverse events were associated with zolmitriptan treatment. A 2.5-mg dose of zolmitriptan is clinically effective and well tolerated for the acute treatment of migraine.
...
PMID:Clinical efficacy and tolerability of 2.5 mg zolmitriptan for the acute treatment of migraine. The 042 Clinical Trial Study Group. 937 90
Zolmitriptan (
Zomig
; formerly 311C90) is a novel 5-hydroxytryptamine (5HT)1B/1D receptor agonist with proven efficacy in the acute treatment of migraine with or without preceding aura. The drug differs from presently available members of this drug class in that it combines 5HT1B/1D receptor partial agonist activity with robust oral pharmacokinetics and an ability to inhibit trigeminovascular activation centrally as well as peripherally in preclinical studies. Consistent with its selectivity for 5HT1B/1D receptors, zolmitriptan produces constriction of various isolated blood vessels, most notably cranial arteries. In anaesthetized animals, these vascular effects manifest as a selective constriction of cranial arterio-venous anastomoses resulting in a redistribution of carotid arterial blood flow. This effect is produced without significant effects on heart rate, blood pressure or blood flow to the brain, heart or lungs. Zolmitriptan also inhibits trigeminal-evoked increases in cerebral blood flow in anaesthetized cats and blocks trigeminal-evoked plasma protein extravasation in the dura of guinea-pigs. These actions are consistent with a pre-junctional inhibition of neuropeptide release from perivascular afferents of the trigeminal nerve, as confirmed by independent studies showing that zolmitriptan blocks elevations of calcitonin-gene-related peptide in jugular venous blood during electrical stimulation of the trigeminal ganglion. In all of these effects, zolmitriptan is three to four times more potent than sumatriptan, but produces the same maximum response. Zolmitriptan crosses the intact blood-brain barrier to inhibit trigeminovascular activation in the brainstem. This was shown initially by the ability of the drug to block a brainstem reflex provoking vasoactive intestinal peptide release from the VIIth cranial (facial) nerve during trigeminal stimulation. Subsequent ex vivo autoradiography confirmed that intravenously injected [3H]zolmitriptan labels a discrete population of cells in the trigeminal nucleus caudalis (TNC) and nucleus tractus solitarius. Direct evidence for a central neuromodulatory effect of zolmitriptan was provided by electrophysiological experiments which clearly demonstrated that the drug inhibits the excitability of cells in the TNC after systemic administration. This novel pre-clinical profile not only distinguishes zolmitriptan from sumatriptan, but raises intriguing questions about the clinical relevance of a dual action. Studies to date show that zolmitriptan indeed modulates cranial sensory processing in humans, yet central side-effects are no different from sumatriptan. This property may account for the remarkable consistency in clinical efficacy observed in clinical trials.
Cephalalgia
1997 Oct
PMID:Pre-clinical pharmacology of zolmitriptan (Zomig; formerly 311C90), a centrally and peripherally acting 5HT1B/1D agonist for migraine. 939 12
Zolmitriptan (
Zomig
, formerly 311C90) is a novel, oral, acute treatment for migraine. In healthy volunteers it is rapidly and extensively absorbed and has favorable oral bioavailability (approximately 40%) which is not affected by concomitant food intake. On average, 75% of its eventual Cmax is achieved within 1 h of dosing. Plasma concentrations are sustained for 4 to 6 h after dosing with single or multiple peaks in the plasma concentration-time profile, reflecting continued absorption down the gastrointestinal tract. The pharmacokinetics of zolmitriptan indicate dose proportionality over the dose range of 2.5 to 50 mg and there are no significant changes on multiple dosing. Zolmitriptan is cleared by metabolism followed by urinary excretion of the metabolites. There are three major metabolites, one of which, the N-desmethyl metabolite, is active as a 5HT1D agonist and has mean plasma concentrations approximately two thirds those of the parent compound. The other two metabolites, the N-oxide and indoleacetic acid, are inactive. The elimination half lives of zolmitriptan and its metabolites are similar, approximately 3 h. Zolmitriptan and its active metabolite are minimally protein bound in the plasma (approximately 25%). In migraine patients, plasma concentrations of zolmitriptan and its metabolites are lower during a migraine attack than outside an attack. In summary, the pharmacokinetics of zolmitriptan are simple, predictable and appropriate to an acute oral treatment for migraine.
Cephalalgia
1997 Oct
PMID:The clinical pharmacokinetics of zolmitriptan. 939 13
Seven randomized studies in healthy volunteers have investigated interactions between zolmitriptan (
Zomig
, formerly 311C90), a 5HT1B/1D agonist for acute migraine therapy, and selected drugs with which there was a possibility of interaction or a likelihood of concurrent use. Co-administration of oral dihydroergotamine, ergotamine, pizotifen, fluoxetine, paracetamol (acetaminophen)/metoclopramide or selegiline had no clinically significant effects on the pharmacokinetics of zolmitriptan or its metabolites, although small changes were observed in some cases. Co-administration of propranolol resulted in a 56% increase in the area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) of zolmitriptan and a 11% decrease in the AUC of the active metabolite 183C91. However, these pharmacokinetic changes are unlikely to be relevant at lower clinical doses. Moclobemide, a monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A) inhibitor, decreased the clearance of zolmitriptan and, in particular, 183C91. This suggests that MAO-A is involved in the metabolism of 183C91 and it may be prudent to limit the daily zolmitriptan dose in migraine patients maintained on a MAO-A inhibitor. The clinically insignificant blood pressure increases produced by zolmitriptan, and the tolerability profile of this agent, were unaffected by any of the concomitant medications. Clinically significant interactions between zolmitriptan and commonly co-prescribed antimigraine therapies are unlikely.
Cephalalgia
1997 Oct
PMID:Potential drug interactions with the novel antimigraine compound zolmitriptan (Zomig, 311C90). 939 14
The efficacy of zolmitriptan (
Zomig
, 311C90), a 5-hydroxytryptamine (5HT)1B/1D receptor agonist, in the acute oral treatment of migraine was evaluated in an extensive clinical trial program. Four randomized, placebo-controlled studies (total 2480 patients) were performed; data from two of these trials established that a 2.5 mg dose was on the shoulder of the dose-response curve (2-h
headache
response rate 64%), showing similar efficacy to the 5 mg dose (67%). In this program, the efficacy of zolmitriptan was not influenced by the pretreatment
headache
duration; the presence of aura preceding the
headache
, migraine associated with menses or migraine upon awakening; or by concomitant use of oral contraceptives or antidepressants. In addition, zolmitriptan 5 mg proved consistently effective in the treatment of multiple migraine attacks for up to 1 year. Zolmitriptan reduced the incidence of nausea, photophobia and phonophobia, reduced impairment of normal activity and demonstrated positive effects on patients' quality of life. Thus, zolmitriptan is a highly effective acute oral antimigraine therapy, with 2.5 mg providing the optimal balance between efficacy and tolerability.
Cephalalgia
1997 Oct
PMID:Zolmitriptan (Zomig, 311C90), a novel dual central and peripheral 5HT1B/1D agonist: an overview of efficacy. 939 15
Zolmitriptan (
Zomig
, formerly 311C90) at doses of 0.5-50 mg was administered to 316 unique volunteers in clinical pharmacology studies and 2,750 unique patients in eight clinical studies of acute migraine treatment. Overall, subjects received almost 50,000 doses; 97% of exposures were at doses > or = 2.5 mg. In the clinical pharmacology studies, the overall incidence of subject exposures experiencing at least one adverse event was 52% with zolmitriptan 2.5 mg (28% with placebo). In placebo-controlled studies, the overall incidence of patients with at least one adverse event was dose-dependent for zolmitriptan over the 1-15 mg dose range, e.g. 42% and 46% with 1 and 2.5 mg, respectively and 58% with 5 mg (29% with placebo). Only four serious adverse events attributable to zolmitriptan were reported. In a long-term study, during which 2,058 outpatients treated a total of 31,579 migraine attacks with either one or two zolmitriptan 5 mg doses over a period of up to 1 year, the number of attacks associated with at least one adverse event was similar after one (26%) and two (24%) doses. The majority (59%) of the adverse events reported in this study (59%) occurred within 2 h of dosing, were predominantly mild (59%) or moderate (35%) in intensity, of < or = 4 h duration (58%), required no further action (94%). In placebo-controlled studies, the percentage of patients who reported severe adverse events was similar with zolmitriptan 2.5 mg (4%) and placebo (5%). The most frequently reported adverse events with zolmitriptan in the placebo-controlled clinical studies were asthenia, heaviness (other than chest or neck), dry mouth, nausea, dizziness, somnolence, paresthesia and warm sensations. The type and severity of the adverse events was not influenced by gender (although the frequency of reported adverse events was higher in females, as was the case in the placebo group), age, presence of aura prior to the attack, association of migraine with menstruation, concurrent medication, or by the addition of a second zolmitriptan dose. Zolmitriptan showed a similar tolerability profile in the long-term study, in which a low withdrawal rate due to adverse events of 8% was observed. Zolmitriptan was not associated with an increased frequency of central nervous system-related adverse events in a comparative study of sumatriptan, despite pre-clinical and neurophysiological evidence of a dual peripheral and central action of zolmitriptan. Moreover, zolmitriptan doses of 5-20 mg produced no statistically significant effects on objective assessments of psychometric function. Zolmitriptan had no clinically significant effects on blood pressure (even in patients with controlled mild to moderate hypertension or impaired renal function), ECGs (e.g. there was no evidence of ischemic events) or clinical chemistry, hematological or urinalysis measurements. In summary, zolmitriptan is well tolerated, particularly at the recommended dose of 2.5 mg. Zolmitriptan has a well-defined dose-response with 2.5 mg proving highly effective and optimizing the benefit/risk ratio of treatment. Thus, zolmitriptan is well suited as an acute oral treatment for migraine in the outpatient setting.
Cephalalgia
1997 Oct
PMID:Tolerability profile of zolmitriptan (Zomig; 311C90), a novel dual central and peripherally acting 5HT1B/1D agonist. International clinical experience based on > 3000 subjects treated with zolmitriptan. 939 16
Zolmitriptan (
Zomig
, formerly 311C90) is a novel, oral antimigraine drug that is consistently effective and well tolerated in the acute treatment of migraine headache and its associated symptoms. The purpose of this article is to review data available from pharmacological and clinical trials with zolmitriptan and to summarize the clinically relevant features that distinguish this agent. We will review the attributes desirable in a migraine drug and use this as a template for assessing zolmitriptan. Zolmitriptan provides a new oral treatment option for physicians which should help improve patient outcomes.
Cephalalgia
1997 Oct
PMID:Clinical applications of zolmitriptan (Zomig, 311C90). 939 17
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