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Further treatment option for episodic migraine as NICE approves novel oral drug rimegepant

Draft NICE guidance has approved rimegepant, a novel oral drug for preventing migraine, which it said could become available to 145,000 NHS patients.

Rimegepant is the first drug of its class to come in pill form, with other similar medications administered as injections. The calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor antagonist was also the first of its class to be reviewed by NICE.

The draft guidance recommends rimegepant, made by Pfizer and traded under the name Vydura, as an option for preventing episodic migraine in adults where at least three previous preventive treatments have failed.

NICE has also published draft guidance for consultation that does not recommend rimegepant for treating acute migraine, although Pfizer said it was providing additional evidence in a bid to overturn the interim decision.

One of a range of suitable migraine treatments

Episodic migraine is where a person has fewer than 15 migraine days each month and NICE’s draft guidance recommends rimegepant for adults who have at least four migraine attacks per month but fewer than 15.

NICE said current treatments for preventing migraine – including beta-blockers, antidepressants and epilepsy medications – can have significant side effects and be ineffective.

Currently, treatments offered after these have been tried include injections erenumab, fremanezumab or galcanezumab.

NICE draft guidance said that if rimegepant is considered to be one of a range of suitable treatments, the least expensive option should be used following discussion with the patient about advantages and disadvantages of all the options.

NICE expects to publish final guidance next month (5 July), if it receives no appeals from Pfizer, patients or professional groups.

‘Welcome and more convenient’

NICE director of medicines evaluation Helen Knight said: ‘Each year the lives of millions of people in England are blighted by migraine attacks. They can be extremely debilitating and can significantly affect a person’s quality of life. In comments received during consultation on the previous draft guidance, patients and carers described migraine as an invisible disability that affects all aspects of life including family, social activities, mental health, finances and education.

‘Rimegepant is the first oral treatment for migraine to be recommended by NICE and for many thousands of people it is likely to be a welcome and more convenient addition to existing options for a condition that is often overlooked and undertreated.’

She added: ‘Today’s draft guidance demonstrates our commitment to focusing on what matters most and getting the best care to people while ensuring value for the taxpayer.’

The Migraine Trust highlighted that as opposed to conventional acute treatments such as triptans, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and other painkillers, the group of drugs that rimegepant belongs to (commonly called the gepants) do not seem to cause medication overuse headache.

It said medication overuse headache is a significant problem for people with migraine, with a 2019 survey of 1,800 people by the Trust finding that migraine medication had caused medication overuse headache in a third (34%) of patients.

The Trust also said it hopes NICE will reconsider its draft decision not to recommend rimegepant for acute migraine, highlighting that the Scottish Medicines Consortium recently approved it for this use within NHS Scotland.

It is thought that over 5.6 million people in England have episodic migraines, with an estimated 190,000 migraine attacks experienced every day.

A version of this story was originally published by our sister publication Pulse.

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