americanpharmaceuticalreviewDecember 11, 2018
Tag: Biohaven , CGRP , Rimegepant , BHV3000-201
Biohaven announced initial positive results from its ongoing long-term, open-label safety study of its oral calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor antagonist, rimegepant, for the acute treatment of migraine. Based upon this interim analysis (database cutoff of November 21, 2018) of Study BHV3000-201 it appears that rimegepant may be safe and well tolerated with long-term dosing in patients with migraine. In this study, patients are allowed to treat migraine attacks of all severities (mild to severe) up to once daily for up to a full year. The interim results also include hepatic safety and tolerability data of rimegepant 75 mg in study participants based upon review of both adverse events and regularly scheduled liver function tests. Interim hepatic data were reviewed by an external independent panel of liver experts. The panel provided a consensus opinion based upon the Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network (DILIN) causality assessment. The panel did not assess any liver cases as probably related to study drug and there were no Hy's Law cases identified. The panel concluded that there was no liver safety signal detected through the data analysis cut-off date, including in a subset of patients with near-daily dosing (³ 15 doses/month). In aggregate, the panel noted that, compared to placebo arms of other migraine treatments, there was a very low incidence of overall elevations of liver laboratory abnormalities (1.0% incidence of serum ALT or AST > 3xULN). Subjects will continue to participate in Study 201 with additional data analyses to be submitted to the FDA in connection with the planned filing, including the required 120-day safety update.
In addition to the interim safety analysis, preliminary open-label efficacy data from Study 201 suggest that rimegepant may be associated with a reduction in migraine days per month (30 days) compared to the observational lead-in period, suggesting a potential preventive effect. In an exploratory analysis, patients who experienced ≥ 15 migraine days/month (N=172) during the standard of care observation period demonstrated a mean reduction of 4 headache days/month by 12 weeks of intermittent dosing with rimegepant. Approximately 40% of patients who had ≥ 15 headache days/month during the observation period showed at least a 30% or more reduction in their monthly number of headache days by 12 weeks of treatment with rimegepant. Reduction from baseline in the mean number of headache days per month was observed beginning as early as the first month and continued in subsequent months of therapy. Biohaven initiated a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial examining regularly scheduled dosing of rimegepant 75mg for the preventive treatment of migraine in November 2018.
"The totality of the interim results from this long-term dosing trial with rimegepant provides important safety information for our planned NDA submission and also preliminary proof of concept for pursuing rimegepant for both the acute and preventive treatment of migraine," Vlad Coric, M.D., Chief Executive Officer of Biohaven, said. "The clinical outcomes and data from this long-term study to date are particularly meaningful because of the large number of patients who took rimegepant to treat migraine as they would in the real-world, allowing patients to treat every migraine attack, even if mild, up to once daily for one year. We believe rimegepant has the potential to truly improve the lives of patients who suffer from debilitating migraine and we look forward to submitting the NDA for this promising new treatment option in 2019."
The most common individual AEs (occurring ³ 5%) in Study 201 were upper respiratory tract infection and viral respiratory tract infection. There were low rates of discontinuation due to AEs in the treatment period (2.6%).
"We are grateful to the almost 2,000 patients and the clinical trial sites who have participated in this trial to establish the safety and tolerability of rimegepant long term dosing. We look forward to the potential for bringing rimegepant to broader patient populations both in the US and globally," Robert Croop, M.D., Chief Development Officer – Neurology at Biohaven said.
Study 201 is a multicenter, open-label safety study with 1,780 U.S. adult patients treated at the time of the November 21, 2018 interim data analysis cutoff. Eligible patients were required to have a history of two to 14 migraine attacks of moderate to severe intensity per month. Patients were allowed to take rimegepant 75 mg up to once per day for up to 52 weeks. There was not a limit on the number of attacks per month that could be treated. Approximately 473 patients have received near daily dosing (15 or more doses a month) of rimegepant 75mg to date for a duration of 1-12 months.
Migraine is both a widespread and disabling neurological disorder. The Migraine Research Foundation ranks migraine as the world's third most prevalent illness, affecting approximately 36 million people or 1 out of 4 households in the United States. And the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015 rates migraine as the seventh highest specific cause of disability worldwide. More than 90% of migraine sufferers are unable to work or function normally during an attack. Current treatment approaches, such as triptans, can be limited by headache recurrence within 24 hours after taking migraine medication, as well as cardiovascular contraindications and warnings.
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