Post stroke headache occurs in approximately 10-23% of all stroke patients. Its onset is shortly after experiencing a stroke, or stroke like event, and persists for at least three months. These headaches have features which resemble migraine or occur in people who have a previous history of migraine that was once infrequent. Botox is a treatment that is currently approved for the treatment of chronic migraine, that is migraine headaches occurring for at least 15 days a month for at least 3 months. Given the clinical similarity in character and frequency of post stroke headache and migraine, and the fact that stroke affects structures like the blood vessels in the brain that are also affected in migraine, this study is to investigate the possible role that Botox would have in the treatment of Post-Stroke Headache.
The proposed study will be a randomized, open-label, comparator controlled study investigating the safety and efficacy of Botox in Persistent Post "Stroke" (encompassing ischemic stroke, hemorrhagic stroke, CVST, Cervical Vessel Dissection and RCVS) headache patients relative to Placebo with or without concomitant standard pharmacologic and Non-pharmacologic treatments. The study population will be a stratified random sample of stroke patients fulfilling the inclusion criteria and consenting to study. The study groups will consist of 40 patients randomly allocated to receiving Botox according to the treatment regime specified below and 40 patients randomly allocated to Non-Botox standard treatments, to a total study population of 80 patients. A Screening Questionnaire will be developed allowing for the identification of persistent/chronic post stroke headache and the classification into novel vs previous stable migraine sub-groups. Such dichotomization will not affect randomization process up and until one sub-group total had been met. If one arm is met prematurely, the Data and Safety Monitoring Committee will inform study investigators and only patients of the remaining sub-population will be randomized post- screening (stratified random sampling). To facilitate Data collection and monitoring. Patients will be seen in face to face encounters every 12 weeks with interim phone interviews every 4 weeks. A cross platform mobile based application (Migraine Buddy, Healint Analytics)15 will be utilized with patient subjects to allow for documentation of migraine attacks including severity and the facility of real-time documentation of temporal profile, migraine triggers, and medications as well as facility for remote monitoring by study investigators. Subjects will be taught how to use application to export data to study investigators in order to allow timely a communication of potential adverse and serious adverse events. Additionally, the investigators will be undergoing a retrospective analysis of headache patients treated at the Grey Nuns Community Hospital Stroke Clinic in order to add to the literature regarding the clinical characteristics and putative treatment effects in this unique patient population. Treatment Protocol: Botox 200 IU vials for 40 patients for the duration of study (4 treatment cycles); Treatment will be based on the PREEMPT study full treatment and follow the pain protocol to a total of 195 IU in standard injection sites.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Treatment Protocol: Botox 200 IU vials for 40 patients for the duration of study (4 treatment cycles); Treatment will be based on the PREEMPT study full treatment (standard of care) and follow the pain protocol to a total of 195 IU in standard injection sites
Control Group will receive normal standard of care Non-Botox based interventions.
Division of Neurology, Grey Nuns Community Hospital
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Change in Number of Migraine Days
Change in number of migraine days per month
Time frame: after completion of treatment cycles (2 years)
Change in Number of Moderate to Severe Migraine Days.
Change in Number of Moderate to Severe Migraine Days per month
Time frame: after completion of treatment cycles (2 years)
Responder Rates
proportion of patients who experience: a ≥50% reduction in headache days, a ≥50% reduction in moderate/severe headache days, a ≥50% reduction in total cumulative hours of headache on headache days and a ≥5- point improvement in HIT-6 scores.
Time frame: after completion of treatment cycles (2 years)
Headache Intensity
Subjects will be instructed to record the maximum intensity for each headache day. An 11- point VRS will be utilized as is incorporated into the user interface of suggested electronic diary (Migraine BuddyTM Healint).
Time frame: after completion of treatment cycles (2 years)
Cumulative hours per 28 days of moderate/severe pain:
This will be calculated with the suggested electronic diaries. If a subject goes to sleep with headache and wakes up with headache, the time period in between is counted as headache.
Time frame: after treatment of completion cycles (2 years)
Conversion to episodic migraine.
Defined as the proportion of subjects with fewer than 14 migraine or headache days per 4 weeks over a 12-week period.
Time frame: after treatment of completion cycles (2 years)
Scale for depression
Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) is a validated scale included in the IHS guideline as a recommended secondary outcome measure and will be used to assess potential impact of treatment on this outcome. This will be documented on 12 week clinical visits.
Time frame: after treatment of completion cycles (2 years)
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