Minnesota Evidence-based Practice Center, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2013 Sep;28(9):1225-37. doi: 10.1007/s11606-013-2433-1. Epub 2013 Apr 17.
Systematic review of preventive pharmacologic treatments for community-dwelling adults with episodic migraine.
Electronic databases through May 20, 2012.
English-language randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of preventive drugs compared to placebo or active treatments examining rates of ≥50 % reduction in monthly migraine frequency or improvement in quality of life.
We assessed risk of bias and strength of evidence and conducted random effects meta-analyses of absolute risk differences and Bayesian network meta-analysis.
Of 5,244 retrieved references, 215 publications of RCTs provided mostly low-strength evidence because of the risk of bias and imprecision. RCTs examined 59 drugs from 14 drug classes. All approved drugs, including topiramate (9 RCTs), divalproex (3 RCTs), timolol (3 RCTs), and propranolol (4 RCTs); off-label beta blockers metoprolol (4 RCTs), atenolol (1 RCT), nadolol (1 RCT), and acebutolol (1 RCT); angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors captopril (1 RCT) and lisinopril (1 RCT); and angiotensin II receptor blocker candesartan (1 RCT), outperformed placebo in reducing monthly migraine frequency by ≥50 % in 200-400 patients per 1,000 treated. Adverse effects leading to treatment discontinuation (68 RCTs) were greater with topiramate, off-label antiepileptics, and antidepressants than with placebo. Limited direct evidence as well as frequentist and exploratory network Bayesian meta-analysis showed no statistically significant differences in benefits between approved drugs. Off-label angiotensin-inhibiting drugs and beta-blockers were most effective and tolerable for episodic migraine prevention.
We did not quantify reporting bias or contact principal investigators regarding unpublished trials.
Approved drugs prevented episodic migraine frequency by ≥50 % with no statistically significant difference between them. Exploratory network meta-analysis suggested that off-label angiotensin-inhibiting drugs and beta-blockers had favorable benefit-to-harm ratios. Evidence is lacking for long-term effects of drug treatments (i.e., trials of more than 3 months duration), especially for quality of life.
系统评价预防社区居住的 episodic 偏头痛成人的药物治疗。
电子数据库至 2012 年 5 月 20 日。
与安慰剂或活性药物相比,预防药物的英语随机对照试验(RCT),评估每月偏头痛频率降低≥50%或生活质量改善的比率。
我们评估了偏倚风险和证据强度,并进行了绝对风险差异的随机效应荟萃分析和贝叶斯网络荟萃分析。
在 5244 篇检索到的参考文献中,215 篇 RCT 出版物主要提供低强度证据,因为存在偏倚和不精确的风险。RCT 研究了来自 14 个药物类别的 59 种药物。所有批准的药物,包括托吡酯(9 项 RCT)、丙戊酸(3 项 RCT)、噻吗洛尔(3 项 RCT)和普萘洛尔(4 项 RCT);非标签β受体阻滞剂美托洛尔(4 项 RCT)、阿替洛尔(1 项 RCT)、纳多洛尔(1 项 RCT)和醋丁洛尔(1 项 RCT);血管紧张素转换酶抑制剂卡托普利(1 项 RCT)和赖诺普利(1 项 RCT);以及血管紧张素 II 受体阻滞剂坎地沙坦(1 项 RCT),在每 1000 名治疗患者中有 200-400 名患者中,每月偏头痛频率降低≥50%,优于安慰剂。导致治疗中断的不良反应(68 项 RCT)在托吡酯、非标签抗癫痫药和抗抑郁药中比安慰剂更常见。直接证据有限,以及传统的和探索性的网络贝叶斯荟萃分析表明,在批准的药物之间,在获益方面没有统计学上的显著差异。非标签的血管紧张素抑制药物和β受体阻滞剂对 episodic 偏头痛预防最有效且耐受良好。
我们没有量化报告偏倚或联系主要研究者以获取未发表的试验。
批准的药物使 episodic 偏头痛的频率降低了≥50%,但它们之间没有统计学上的显著差异。探索性网络荟萃分析表明,非标签的血管紧张素抑制药物和β受体阻滞剂具有有利的获益-危害比。缺乏药物治疗的长期效果(即,持续时间超过 3 个月的试验)的证据,特别是对生活质量的影响。