Welcome, Guest. Please Login or Register
Clusterheadaches.com
 
Search box updated Dec 3, 2011... Search ch.com with Google!
  HomeHelpSearchLoginRegisterEvent CalendarBirthday List  
 





Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print
Consensus Criteria for Refractory CCH (Read 1295 times)
Hoppy
CH.com Alumnus
***
Offline


LAUGHTER IS THE BEST MEDICINE


Posts: 1890
Perth WA
Gender: male
Consensus Criteria for Refractory CCH
Jun 25th, 2015 at 8:04pm
 


BERLIN, Germany — The European Headache Federation (EHF) has developed a consensus statement on what constitutes the rare but often difficult-to-manage condition of refractory chronic cluster headache (rCCH).

According to the new definition, patients can be determined to have rCCH if they experience at least three severe headache attacks per week that affect quality of life and have not responded to at least three consecutive trials of preventive treatments.




Discussing the statement here at the first Congress of the European Academy of Neurology (EAN), Dimos Mitsikostas, MD, PhD, Neurology Department, Athens Naval Hospital, Greece, stressed that the three or more attacks must be severe enough to affect the patient's quality of life.

He also emphasized that patients need to have not benefitted from preventive treatments at the "maximum tolerated dose."

Cluster headaches, which are recurrent, severe headaches often involving intense pain around the eyes, occur in 1 in 1000 people, with chronic cases in only 0.16%. About 8% of CCH cases are resistant to prophylactic pharmaceutical treatments.

In such cases, it may be necessary to escalate treatments, but this is a decision made individually by the physician together with the patient, said Dr Mitsikostas.

Expert Committee

The consensus statement was developed in three stages. First, an expert committee of the EHF created a draft that was sent for review to all European National Headache Societies. A revised draft was sent to international investigators who had published studies on cluster headaches in the previous 5 years. With their additional comments, a final draft was written.




According to this final consensus, patients not only need to experience at least three headaches a week severe enough to affect quality of life but also must have had no response to consecutive prophylactic treatment trials with at least three agents that have been shown in randomized, controlled studies to be superior to placebo.

Recommended prophylactic treatments include verapamil, lithium, oral or intravenous steroids, greater occipital nerve infiltration, topiramate, methysergide, ergots, civamide, and long-acting triptans. Some of these agents, said Dr Mitsikostas, may not be available in particular jurisdictions.

The final consensus statement, which was published in The Journal of Headache and Pain, "explains the evidence and the strength of the evidence for each drug," said Dr Mitsikostas. "It also makes it clearer that verapamil should be the drug of first choice."


Dr Mitsikostas commented that in his personal practice, his first choice for patients with rCCH is verapamil, but if the highest tolerated dose of that drug doesn't do the trick, his second choice is often occipital nerve infiltration.

Physicians need to monitor patients taking not only verapamil but also lithium and methysergide, said Dr Mitsikostas. He added that to offer greater occipital nerve infiltration, physicians need appropriate clinical experience. "It's a simple technique, but physicians have to have particular expertise."

Drug Combinations

The committee recommended consideration of drug combinations, but at the discretion of the physician, said Dr Mitsikostas. Responding later to a query from a delegate about whether he combined verapamil with a steroid, Dr Mitsikostas said his center does this "sometimes, but not often."


He added that he doesn't often combine drugs except when there are comorbidities, in which case he offers a "soup" of drugs, each targeted to a specific condition.

Session co-chair Rigmor Jensen, MD, PhD, professor, Department of Neurology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, stressed the need for caution in using steroids long term, given the risks for osteoporosis and other adverse effects. "We should be careful with the steroids and use them only for a short time."

According to Dr Mitsikostas, patients need to try prophylactic drugs at the maximum tolerated dose over a sufficient period. The committee did not specify what the "sufficient" time should be, he said.


"Some members believed that 3 months was enough; some thought 4 or 6 months was enough, so we decided not to define what period of time it should be. It's up to the physician's judgment."

However, he said, "we insist that the maximum tolerated dose of this preventive treatment should be tested; not just the recommended dose, but the maximum tolerated by the patient."

The committee recommended that to rule out symptomatic CCH, physicians should order brain MRI and magnetic resonance angiography. If they're still "not comfortable," they could supplement this with further investigations, including carotid computed tomographic angiography or triplex carotid ultrasonography.


Committee members also suggested that physicians rule out other primary headache conditions, including persistent idiopathic facial pain, short-lasting unilateral neuralgiform headache attacks with cranial autonomic symptoms, short-lasting unilateral neuralgiform headache attacks with conjunctival injection and tearing, cluster-tic syndrome, or paroxysmal hemicranias.

Polysomnography might be a useful test, at least to rule out sleep issues, said Dr Mitsikostas. "If the headaches coexist with obstructive sleep apnea, it makes it very difficult to treat."

He added that medication-overuse headaches only rarely accompany rCCH.

Physicians should manage comorbidities, including such things as depression and "nocebo behaviors," he said. Some patients are so reluctant to try a new drug because of what they're convinced were previous bad experiences that they "continue to suffer," said Dr Mitsikostas.

Dr Mitsikostas has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

Congress of the European Academy of Neurology (EAN). Abstract 02210. Presented June 21, 2015.


 

Back to top
  
 
IP Logged
 
BarbaraD
CH.com Alumnus
***
Offline


Hugs to ya


Posts: 8333
Douglasville, TX
Gender: female
Re: Consensus Criteria for Refractory CCH
Reply #1 - Jun 26th, 2015 at 10:43am
 
If I'm reading this right - he's starting at square ONE... He hasn't even studied O2 and "lithium?"

I think he needs to talk to Dr. Peter G. We've come a long way since his "findings".. This guy needs to read some of "our" stuff..

Sorry - I just get ticked off about stuff like this (if I'm reading what he's saying right and I could be wrong about what I'm reading - wouldn't be the first time).  Kiss
Back to top
  

What don't kill ya, Makes ya stronger!
 
IP Logged
 
Mike NZ
CH.com Hall of Famer
*****
Offline


Oxygen rocks! D3 too!


Posts: 3785
Auckland, New Zealand
Gender: male
Re: Consensus Criteria for Refractory CCH
Reply #2 - Jun 26th, 2015 at 6:10pm
 
Lithium is mentioned a couple of times.

Oxygen, an abortive, isn't mentioned but this is appropriate for the article since it is all around the definition of rCCH which is with respect to multiple preventives having been tried for a long enough period of time at the maximum dose that the patient can tolerate.

Quote:
According to Dr Mitsikostas, patients need to try prophylactic drugs at the maximum tolerated dose over a sufficient period. The committee did not specify what the "sufficient" time should be, he said.

"Some members believed that 3 months was enough; some thought 4 or 6 months was enough, so we decided not to define what period of time it should be. It's up to the physician's judgment."


Being on a preventative that isn't working for 3 months, never mind 6 months for someone who is chronic must be pretty tough, even if this includes time to ramp up to very high doses. Either this is an arbitrary time period or there are cases where someone has responded after several months. I'd be interested to understand which.

Quote:
if they experience at least three severe headache attacks per week that affect quality of life


The quantity of 3 seems to be arbitrary and I'm not sure what the real difference is between 2 and 3 over a week. Are two kip 10s of less "value" that 3 kip 5s?

Plus I think by definition just about any CH affects quality of life. Unless this is trying to mask out low kip number CHs.

However it is good that CH is being discussed at this level and the exposure may help educate a few more neurologists and headache specialists about what we go through.
Back to top
  
 
IP Logged
 
BarbaraD
CH.com Alumnus
***
Offline


Hugs to ya


Posts: 8333
Douglasville, TX
Gender: female
Re: Consensus Criteria for Refractory CCH
Reply #3 - Jun 27th, 2015 at 8:55am
 
Any discussion on CH is good. I just didn't think he hit on all bases.

And yes, ANY CH affects the quality of life.
Back to top
  

What don't kill ya, Makes ya stronger!
 
IP Logged
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print

DISCLAIMER: All information contained on this web site is for informational purposes only.  It is in no way intended to be used as a replacement for professional medical treatment.   clusterheadaches.com makes no claims as to the scientific/clinical validity of the information on this site OR to that of the information linked to from this site.  All information taken from the internet should be discussed with a medical professional!