Clinical Topics & News

Alan M. Rapoport, MD, on Medication Overuse Headache


 

So, what should we do as physicians? If a patient has MOH, I educate them, try to detoxify them slowly on an outpatient basis, and if I feel it will help, start them on a preventive medication, even before the detoxification begins so they can reach therapeutic levels. In the future, will I use one of the standard preventives, approved or off-label, for migraine prevention (beta blockers, topiramate and other anticonvulsants, antidepressants, angiotensin receptor blockers, onabotulinumtoxinA and others)? It remains to be seen. I am leaning towards the anti CGRP ligand and receptor monoclonal antibodies and preventive small molecule oral CGRP receptor blockers. While that might be enough to start with, I will continue explaining to my patients why they should actively begin a slow detoxification.

Let us see what some headache specialists said about both questions.

Robert Cowan, MD, FAAN:

There have been studies that show migraine can improve without the discontinuation of medication overuse. But that is not what the question asks. The question as posed is whether MOH can be treated with a preventive medication without detoxification. Since the diagnosis of MOH has, in the past, required the cessation of overuse leading to an improvement in the underlying headache, then technically, the answer would be “no.” But that being said, there is ample evidence that the number of headache days/months and other measures of headache can, in fact, improve with the introduction of a preventive, along with other measures such as lifestyle modification. The other ambiguity in the question has to do with what is meant by “detoxification.” Is this a hospital-based detox, or is a gradual decrease in the offending medicine in combination with the addition of a preventive, still considered “detoxification?” Also, does the response imply a sequential relationship between the detoxification and initiation of the preventive? Without further clarification, this response ratio to the question is very difficult to interpret.

There is animal data that suggests acute migraine medications may promote MOH in susceptible individuals through CGRP-dependent mechanisms and anti-CGRP antibodies may be useful for the MOH ( Cephalalgia. 2017;37(6):560-570. doi: 10.1177/0333102416650702). While there are no published CGRP antibody studies that did not exclude MOH patients to my knowledge, an abstract by Silberstein et al at the recent AHS Scientific Meeting reported decreased use of overused medication with fremanazumab ( Headache. 2018;58(S2):76-78).

Ira Turner, MD

There is clear data to suggest that it is not necessary to detoxify these patients before starting preventive therapy. This is true for the older and newer medications. In fact, not only do these preventive therapies still work in the presence of medication overuse, but they also help to reduce medication overuse. The one caveat that must be mentioned is that this may not apply to opiate overuse. Opiate over-users were excluded from these studies.

While it is of course our goal to reduce and stop acute medication overuse, it should not be done at the expense of delaying preventive therapy. In fact, it is desirable to do both simultaneously. This applies to oral preventive medications, botulinum toxin and CGRP monoclonal antibodies.

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