Harden R Norman, Cottrill Jerod, Gagnon Christine M, Smitherman Todd A, Weinland Stephan R, Tann Beverley, Joseph Petra, Lee Thomas S, Houle Timothy T
Center for Pain Studies, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, 446 E. Ontario, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
Headache. 2009 May;49(5):732-43. doi: 10.1111/j.1526-4610.2008.01286.x. Epub 2008 Oct 24.
To evaluate the efficacy of botulinum toxin A (BT-A) as a prophylactic treatment for chronic tension-type headache (CTTH) with myofascial trigger points (MTPs) producing referred head pain.
Although BT-A has received mixed support for the treatment of TTH, deliberate injection directly into the cervical MTPs very often found in this population has not been formally evaluated.
Patients with CTTH and specific MTPs producing referred head pain were assigned randomly to receive intramuscular injections of BT-A or isotonic saline (placebo) in a double-blind design. Daily headache diaries, pill counts, trigger point pressure algometry, range of motion assessment, and responses to standardized pain and psychological questionnaires were used as outcome measures; patients returned for follow-up assessment at 2 weeks, 1 month, 2 months, and 3 months post injection. After 3 months, all patients were offered participation in an open-label extension of the study. Effect sizes were calculated to index treatment effects among the intent-to-treat population; individual time series models were computed for average pain intensity.
The 23 participants reported experiencing headache on a near-daily basis (average of 27 days/month). Compared with placebo, patients in the BT-A group reported greater reductions in headache frequency during the first part of the study (P = .013), but these effects dissipated by week 12. Reductions in headache intensity over time did not differ significantly between groups (P = .80; maximum d = 0.13), although a larger proportion of BT-A patients showed evidence of statistically significant improvements in headache intensity in the time series analyses (62.5% for BT-A vs 30% for placebo). There were no differences between the groups on any of the secondary outcome measures.
The evidence for BT-A in headache is mixed, and even more so in CTTH. However, the putative technique of injecting BT-A directly into the ubiquitous MTPs in CTTH is partially supported in this pilot study. Definitive trials with larger samples are needed to test this hypothesis further.
评估A型肉毒毒素(BT-A)作为一种预防性治疗方法,用于治疗伴有产生牵涉性头痛的肌筋膜触发点(MTP)的慢性紧张型头痛(CTTH)的疗效。
尽管BT-A在紧张型头痛(TTH)治疗方面的支持意见不一,但对于直接注射到该人群中常见的颈部MTP的做法尚未进行正式评估。
将患有CTTH且有特定产生牵涉性头痛的MTP的患者随机分配,采用双盲设计接受肌肉注射BT-A或等渗盐水(安慰剂)。使用每日头痛日记、药丸计数、触发点压力痛觉测定、活动范围评估以及对标准化疼痛和心理问卷的反应作为结局指标;患者在注射后2周、1个月、2个月和3个月返回进行随访评估。3个月后,所有患者都被邀请参加该研究的开放标签扩展阶段。计算效应量以衡量意向性治疗人群中的治疗效果;计算个体时间序列模型以得出平均疼痛强度。
23名参与者报告几乎每天都有头痛(平均每月27天))。与安慰剂相比,BT-A组患者在研究的第一阶段报告头痛频率有更大程度的降低(P = 0.013),但这些效果在第12周时消失。随着时间的推移,两组之间头痛强度的降低没有显著差异(P = 0.80;最大效应量d = 0.13),尽管在时间序列分析中,更大比例的BT-A患者在头痛强度方面有统计学上显著改善的证据(BT-A组为62.5%,安慰剂组为30%)。两组在任何次要结局指标上均无差异。
BT-A治疗头痛的证据不一,在CTTH中更是如此。然而,在这项初步研究中,将BT-A直接注射到CTTH中普遍存在的MTP的假定技术得到了部分支持。需要进行更大样本的确定性试验来进一步检验这一假设。