1. Academic Validation
  2. Parenteral dihydroergotamine for acute migraine headache: a systematic review of the literature

Parenteral dihydroergotamine for acute migraine headache: a systematic review of the literature

  • Ann Emerg Med. 2005 Apr;45(4):393-401. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2004.07.430.
Ian Colman 1 Michael D Brown Grant D Innes Eric Grafstein Ted E Roberts Brian H Rowe
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Abstract

Study objective: Many therapies are used in the treatment of acute migraine headache, with little agreement on effectiveness. This systematic review is designed to determine the effectiveness of parenteral dihydroergotamine in reducing pain, nausea, and relapse for episodes of acute migraine in adults.

Methods: Randomized controlled trials were identified using MEDLINE, EMBASE, other computerized databases, hand searching, bibliographies, and contacts with industry and authors. Studies in which dihydroergotamine (alone or in combination with an antiemetic) was compared with placebo or any other common migraine therapy were considered. Relevance, inclusion, and study quality were assessed independently by 2 reviewers.

Results: From 281 potentially relevant abstracts, 11 studies met the inclusion criteria. Solitary dihydroergotamine use was compared to sumatriptan and phenothiazines in 3 studies; results failed to demonstrate a significant benefit of dihydroergotamine over these therapies. In 8 combination treatment studies, heterogeneity in study methodology prevented statistical pooling. However, dihydroergotamine administered with an antiemetic was as effective as or more effective than meperidine, valproate, or ketorolac across all pain, nausea, and relapse outcomes reported in all studies.

Conclusion: This evidence suggests that dihydroergotamine is not as effective as sumatriptan or phenothiazines as a single agent for treatment of acute migraine headache; however, when administered with an antiemetic, dihydroergotamine appears to be as effective as opiates, ketorolac, or valproate. Given its nonnarcotic properties, parenteral dihydroergotamine combined with an antiemetic should be considered as effective initial therapy in clinical practice.

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