Depression and anxiety are common comorbidities with migraine. The risk of serotonin syndrome when triptans are used in conjunction with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors or serotonin and noradrenaline reuptake inhibitors is low. A recent retrospective data analysis showed there were only two confirmed cases of serotonergic syndrome in a cohort of 19,017 patients who were co-prescribed a triptan and an antidepressant.11
Medicine overuse can worsen migraine. Triptans should therefore be limited to less than 10 days a month and simple analgesics to no more than 15 days a month. Opioids are not recommended for migraine due to limited effectiveness and the risk of drug overuse.
Managing nausea
Intercurrent nausea can impair absorption so taking an antiemetic with the first analgesic can help.12 If patients are unable to take oral medicines, other routes of administration can be considered:
- non-oral triptan formulations
- suppositories, such as NSAIDs (indometacin or diclofenac)
- ondansetron wafers for nausea and vomiting
- prochlorperazine suppositories.
Menstrual migraines
Menstrually related migraine attacks are more severe, more difficult to treat and more likely to recur. A combined oral contraceptive pill can be used for up to six consecutive months to limit the number and choose the timing of the menstrually related attacks. However, the combined oral contraceptive pill should be avoided in migraine with aura due to the risk of stroke. In addition, some patients have increased migraine attacks on a combined contraceptive pill. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatories (such as naproxen) may help if there are any perimenstrual symptoms, in addition to the usual acute therapies.13
Migraine prophylaxis
Prophylactic therapy14,15 is generally indicated in patients with:
- three or more severe headache days per month causing functional impairment that are not consistently responsive to acute treatments
- more than 6–8 headache days per month despite responsiveness to acute treatments
- contraindications to acute migraine treatments
- particularly disabling symptoms even if infrequent attacks (such as brainstem aura, hemiplegic migraine, syncope)
- ongoing significant impact to a patient’s functioning despite lifestyle modifications, trigger management and use of acute treatments
- risk of drug overuse headache.
Considerations for choice of preventive medicines include evidence for efficacy, adverse effect profile, drug interactions, contraindications, patient comorbidities, costs, availability and patient preference.
All oral prophylactic drugs for migraine were developed for other purposes such as hypertension, depression and epilepsy. In general, they alter the neurotransmitters involved in migraine. Their efficacy can only be fully assessed after 8–12 weeks at a therapeutic dose.
Antihypertensives used for prophylaxis include calcium channel blockers (such as verapamil), beta blockers (such as propranolol), and angiotensin II receptor inhibitors (such as candesartan).
Antidepressants include amitriptyline and nortriptyline. Antiepileptic drugs are also used – topiramate is the most evidence-based of the oral migraine preventors, but carries potential adverse effects such as altered mood, verbal fluency issues (word finding) and paraesthesia. Sodium valproate is also prescribed as prophylaxis for migraines (see Box).5