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October 23, 2001; 57 (8) Articles

Comparison of rizatriptan and other triptans on stringent measures of efficacy

J. U. Adelman, R. B. Lipton, M. D. Ferrari, H.–C. Diener, K. A. McCarroll, K. Vandormael, C. R. Lines
First published October 23, 2001, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.57.8.1377
J. U. Adelman
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R. B. Lipton
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M. D. Ferrari
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H.–C. Diener
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K. A. McCarroll
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K. Vandormael
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Comparison of rizatriptan and other triptans on stringent measures of efficacy
J. U. Adelman, R. B. Lipton, M. D. Ferrari, H.–C. Diener, K. A. McCarroll, K. Vandormael, C. R. Lines
Neurology Oct 2001, 57 (8) 1377-1383; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.57.8.1377

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Abstract

Objective: To compare the efficacy of oral rizatriptan 10 mg with oral doses of sumatriptan, naratriptan, and zolmitriptan on stringent outcome measures.

Methods: Retrospective analysis of data from five randomized, placebo-controlled, double-masked clinical trials in which oral rizatriptan was directly compared with oral sumatriptan 100 mg (n = 772), 50 mg (n = 1116), 25 mg (n = 1183), naratriptan 2.5 mg (n = 413), and zolmitriptan 2.5 mg (n = 580) for the acute treatment of a moderate or severe migraine attack.

Outcome measures: Percentage of patients pain-free at 2 hours, symptom-free at 2 hours (no pain, nausea, photophobia, phonophobia, vomiting, or functional disability), 24-hour sustained pain-free (no headache at 2 hours, no recurrence, and no additional antimigraine medications for 24 hours).

Results: More patients taking rizatriptan 10 mg were pain-free at 2 hours than were patients taking sumatriptan 100 mg (40% vs 33%, p = 0.019), sumatriptan 50 mg (40% vs 35%, p = 0.009), sumatriptan 25 mg (38% vs 27%, p < 0.001), naratriptan 2.5 mg (45% vs 21%, p < 0.001), and zolmitriptan 2.5 mg (43% vs 36%, p = 0.041). More patients taking rizatriptan 10 mg were symptom-free at 2 hours than were patients taking sumatriptan 100 mg (31% vs 22%, p = 0.002), sumatriptan 50 mg (33% vs 28%, p = 0.003), sumatriptan 25 mg (33% vs 24%, p < 0.001), naratriptan 2.5 mg (30% vs 11%, p < 0.001), and zolmitriptan 2.5 mg (31% vs 24%, p = 0.042). More patients taking rizatriptan 10 mg had a 24-hour sustained pain-free response than did patients taking sumatriptan 100 mg (27% vs 23%, p = 0.112), sumatriptan 50 mg (30% vs 26%, p = 0.015), sumatriptan 25 mg (27% vs 20%, p = 0.005), naratriptan 2.5 mg (29% vs 17%, p = 0.004), and zolmitriptan 2.5 mg (32% vs 24%, p = 0.013).

Conclusion: Oral rizatriptan 10 mg was more effective than oral sumatriptan, naratriptan, and zolmitriptan on stringent outcome measures of pain-free response at 2 hours, symptom-free response at 2 hours, and 24-hour sustained pain-free response.

  • Received October 26, 2000.
  • Accepted June 12, 2001.
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