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Does Emgality Help Cluster Headaches? 2023

Does Emgality Help Cluster Headaches?

Cluster Classification.  Cluster headaches (CH) are the most severe headache known to man.  They are called “suicide headaches” for good reason.  It is interesting that when the first American classification of headache was released in the JAMA in 1962 it had migraine as the main classification of headache and underneath the name migraine were listed different types of migraine such as common migraine, classical migraine, hemiplegic migraine, and at the bottom—cluster headache.

That is, cluster headache was originally listed as a type of migraine, but that was long ago and now the International Classification of Headache Disorder, first published in 1988, and now called ICHD III, has cluster headache as separate from migraine and called a Trigeminal Autonomic Cephalgia.

Because Cluster Headaches are so severe, there is a great need for more effective preventive treatment.

This is an article by Britt Talley Daniel MD, retired member of the American Academy of Neurology, the American Headache Society, migraine textbook author, podcaster, and blogger.

Summary

Emgality is a new preventive treatment for episodic cluster headache that blocks the inflammatory neurochemical, Calcitonin Gene-related Peptide (CGRP). Emgality is self administered subcutaneously monthly and can reduce cluster headaches by 50%.

Consider my Mini Book on Migraine.

Subcutaneous Emgality Injection

Related questions.

What is the data showing that Emgality worked?

The FDA approval cameafter a clinical trial comparing Emgality to placebo (N=106) which showed that patients taking Emgality experienced 8.7 fewer cluster headache attacks than patients taking placebo after 3 weeks.  The most commonly reported adverse reaction during the trial was injection site reactions.

“Emgality provides patients with the first FDA-approved drug that reduces the frequency of attacks of episodic cluster headache, an extremely painful and often debilitating condition,” said Eric Bastings, MD, deputy director of the Division of Neurology Products in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

What is the neurologic exam of migraine and cluster headache like?  Except for rare findings of one-sided eyelid drooping (ptosis) and one-sided pupillary smallness (miosis) found only in older patients who have had cluster headache for years and called Horner syndrome, both migraine and cluster headache have a normal neurologic exam. 

Right Horner syndrome with slight lid droop and pupillary smallness.

Read my webpage article “What is Migraine?” by clicking here.

What does the MRI scan show?.  Both migraine and cluster headache have normal cerebral MRI scans, except that 30-40% of migraine patients may have “microvascular T2 lesions” or “migraine freckles” which are benign and currently are thought to mean nothing serious. These lesions are more frequent in Migraine with aura patients rather than Migraine without aurs.

What is the clinical occurrence of cluster headache?   Episodic migraine occurs usually only several times a week and has symptoms of headache occurring on one side of the head in 80% of patients.  However, migraine may switch sides, like from the right to the left side, although many patients will say that it “usually” just comes on one side.

Cluster headaches come without warning and reach a peak within 2-15 minutes.  This is different from a typical migraine without aura attack which may take half an hour to several hours between onset and peak of headache pain.  Cluster headaches are very severe, quick onset, one-sided headaches which consist of pain around the eye, temple, or cheek.  Cluster headaches may track the clock, coming at the same time every day.  This periodicity is a key feature of cluster headache; the attacks of pain recur at the same hour each day for the duration of the cluster bout.

Clock in my head

The attacks characteristically occur one to two hours after going to sleep in half of patients.  An attack at this time corresponds with dreaming and REM stage sleep.  Some patients have several attacks at night consistently interrupting sleep.  Some patients get daytime attacks associated with napping or relaxation.  Seventy-five percent of attacks occur between 9 p.m. and 10 a.m.

The duration of the attacks ranges from 15 to 180 minutes, with most cases lasting about 30 minutes to 2 hours with a mean of 45 minutes.  The attacks may occur 1 to 8 times a day and the patient is pain free between attacks.

Read my webpage article on “Biologic Clock and Cluster Headache” by clicking here.

What are the attacks like, the cluster period?

The headaches come in time periods called “clusters” which usually last 6-12 weeks. The term “cluster” here means that the headaches cluster together in time, much like grapes cluster together on the vine.

Thus, the patient may state that he had 6 weeks of headaches in March and April of 2017, but then the headaches completely stopped.  Following this there were no headaches in all of 2018, but they started again in March of 2019 and brought the patient to the doctor.

Although the usual cluster period is 1 ½ to 3 months, the average cluster time is 6 weeks.  Ten percent of patients develop chronic cluster type headaches all year round and, in these patients, the “cluster” term is meaningless.

Also, cluster patients may cycle between intermittent or the typical "cluster" pattern and chronic daily cluster headaches.  Chronic cluster patients may evolve into the episodic form without treatment.

Although some cluster periods occur in the spring and fall, other researchers have found cluster cycles in February and June that seem to occur at the time of increase in daylight hours.  Cluster attacks occur 7 to 10 days before the longest and shortest days in the year, suggesting that the pineal gland located in the center of the brain may be involved. 

What is the headache location?  Cluster headaches are strictly one-sided temporal or supratemporal located pain.  Only 15% of patients will switch sides for the duration of a bout.  Very rarely the pain will switch sides during the cluster period.

Migraine may occur on one side in the temple, forehead, behind the eye, in the back of the head on one side, or in the cheek located trigeminal maxillary “sinus” on one or both sides of the face.  Migraines starting in the back of the head on one side may move to behind the eye on the same side later during the headache period.

What are the episodes like for cluster headache?.  Episodic migraine may come once or twice a week and is defined as lasting 4-72 hours.  Chronic migraine, usually caused by medication overuse, is defined as having 15 headaches a month, 8 of which have migraine features.

Episodic cluster headache comes in “clusters” usually in the spring or in the fall lasting about 6 weeks.  During the 6-week cluster time, headaches may come up to 8 times a day and last 15-180 minutes.  Ten percent of cluster headache patients may have chronic cluster headache, which is continuous attacks with no remission.

Read my webpage article “Cluster Headache” by clicking here.

What is the response to Triptan therapy for acute treatment? Both migraine and cluster headache respond to acute triptan therapy.  Cluster headaches come on so quickly and produce onset to peak pain in 2-5 minutes.  Pain onset for migraine is usually longer--30-60 minutes.  Because of their quick onset only large dose, fast onset triptan therapy will work.  Suggested drugs are 6 mg subcutaneous sumatriptan, 25 mg nasal spray sumatriptan, or 5 mg nasal spray zomatriptan.  Six mg subcutaneous sumatriptan is generally considered the best treatment.

Nasal spray sumatriptan and zomatriptan treatment onset is as fast as sumatriptan sc injectable—10 minutes.  However, nasal spray sumatriptan gives a low level of medication in the brain of 10 mg while 6 mg sc sumatriptan gives a level of 100 mg.  Injectable 6 mg sumatriptan is the most effective acute treatment for migraine and for cluster headache.

Sumatriptan 6 mg subcutaneous

What is the insurance coverage for triptan use for cluster headache? There is poor insurance coverage for sc sumatriptan, the best drug for treating cluster headaches.  Glaxo, the pharmaceutical company that brought out sumatriptan only got an FDA indication for treating migraine, but never for cluster headache and it’s been 28 years (1991-2019) and no indication yet.  It’s not coming.

Therefore, since medical insurance companies only approve and pay for drugs that have an FDA indication for use, United States medical insurance companies don’t adequately cover cluster headache.  They will usually allow 9 of the 6mg sc shots of sumatriptan, but that’s it and not enough to cover a neurological condition that may occur 8 times a day every day for 6 weeks. 

There are articles warning that medication overuse headache may occur with cluster headache, but it must be rare unless the patient is mistakenly taking opioids or butalbital for treatment.

What is the response of cluster headache to oxygen treatment?  Cluster headache usually responds quickly to nasal oxygen delivered via a scuba tank oxygen cylinder, tubing, and nasal prongs or a mask.  This is great since oxygen is, well, oxygen and it’s not toxic or expensive, and it will usually stop a cluster attack in minutes.  Also, there is some older data on success with nasal oxygen for migraine, although it usually requires a longer duration of therapy, like an hour.

Oxygen therapy

Read my webpage article “Does Oxygen Work for Cluster Headaches?” by clicking here.

What are the indications for Emgality (galcanzumag-gnlm)?  Emgality is a prescription medicine used in adults for:

The preventive treatment of migraine. The medicine (120 mg) comes in a pre-filled pen or syringe and is taken once a month.

The treatment of episodic cluster headache. The medicine (300 mg) comes in three (100 mg) pre-filled syringes, which are taken one after the other at the start of a cluster period and then every month until the end of the cluster period.

What are the warnings and side effects of Emgality?

Do not use Emgality if you are allergic to galcanezumab-gnlm or any of the ingredients in Emgality.

Emgality may cause allergic reactions, such as itching, rash, hives, and trouble breathing. Allergic reactions can happen days after using Emgality.  Call your healthcare provider or get emergency medical help right away if you have any of the following symptoms, which may be part of an allergic reaction: swelling of your face, mouth, tongue, or throat, or trouble breathing.

What about the use of Emgality with other drugs?  Emgality is one of three FDA approved drugs for treating migraine, and the only of the group indicated for treating cluster headache.  Emgality blocks the effect of CGRP, one of the neurotoxins released in the brain with migraine and cluster headache. 

These CGRP antibody drugs have no effect with any other known drug and can be used liberally and safely with any other drug.  For instance penicillin has 10 or more drugs that cannot be used when the patient is on penicillin, but the CGRP drugs can be used with any drug.

What are the common side effects of Emgality?

The most common side effects of Emgality are injection site reactions.  This is from the subcutaneous injection with a small needle and is like the small bruise one may get from having blood for lab tests drawn from the arm.  Diabetics give sc shots four times a day for life.

What are Migraine without aura symptoms? To have an accurate diagnosis migraine there should be:

A. Five similar attacks with symptoms as follow below.

B. The migraine attacks last 4-72 hours.

C. The attacks should have 2 out of the following 4 symptoms:

One sided pain

Throbbing or pulsating pain

Pain that is moderate or severe, on a 1-10 pain scale migraine is over 5-up to 10

Migraine pain is disabling so the patient wants to be still or lie down and sleep; thus, an attack of migraine may limit social activity or work.

D. The attacks should have 2 of the following 4 symptoms:

Nausea

Vomiting

Sensitivity to light-photophobia

Sensitivity to sound-sonophobia.

 What are Cluster symptoms?

ICHD-3 Beta Definition of Cluster Headache

A. At least 5 attacks fulfilling B-D below.

B. Severe unilateral orbital, supraorbital, and/or temporal pain lasting 15 to 180 min.

C. Attack is associated with at least one of the following signs on the side of pain:

1. Conjunctival injection

2. Lacrimation

3. Nasal congestion

4. Rhinorrhea

5. Forehead and facial sweating

6. Miosis

7. Ptosis

8. Eyelid edema

D. Frequency: from one every other day to eight per day

E. At least one of the following:

1. History, physical, and neurological examinations do not suggest disorders in groups 5-11 of IHS classification.

2. History and/or physical and/or neurological examinations do suggest other disorder, but it is ruled out by appropriate investigations.

3. Such disorder is present, but tension-type headache does not occur for the first time in close temporal relation to the disorder.

 What do Cluster clinical features mean?

During the cluster headache in addition to pain the patient may experience symptoms on one side of the face around the eye, upper cheek, or temple.  These symptoms may be:

drooping of the upper eyelid (ptosis)

smallness of one pupil (miosis)

sweating above the eye

redness of the eye (conjunctival injection)

tearing of one eye (lacrimation)

nasal congestion or drainage of clear fluid (rhinorrhea)

These “sinus” type symptoms many times bring the patient to the general doctor or ear nose throat surgeon with a self-made diagnosis of “sinus headache” with resultant treatment with repeat doses of various antibiotics or occasional sinus surgery.

 What is the pain description for cluster headache?

The pain begins quickly, without warning.  It is excruciating in intensity and explosive in quality.  Rarely the pain is pulsatile.  Patients describe the headaches as “killer” headache or “suicide headache.”  The pain may be “boring, stabbing, burning, like a knife, like a hot poker in the eye” and sometimes “pulsating, throbbing, squeezing, or aching.”  At the end of the attack the symptoms resolve in 1-2 minutes

What is the warning for pregnancy and breastfeeding?

None of the CGRP drugs, including Emgality, are indicated during pregnancy and while breastfeeding.  None of the CGRP drugs are approved for children or persons under 18 years of age.

No Emgality for pregnancy and breastfeeding.

What to do for a missed dose?  If a dose of Emgality is missed, then the dose should be given as soon as the patient is aware of it and able.  Then that date of injection is used as the new marker to count one month to the next dose.  Put dosing of medication in your cell phone with an alarm marking the date and time.  Also tell your family, friends, or sometimes your co-workers your dosing schedule so that they may help you not forget.

What about the confusion between Cluster Headache and Chronic Migraine due to medication overuse headache?.  Patients and doctors get these two headache entities mixed up all the time and I hear it in the office.  The patient will have a headache pattern with migraine but not cluster features.  The “cluster” comment is added because the headaches are so frequent, often times daily for months or years. 

Cluster headache usually occurs in men, type A, hard driven types.  I once saw a patient with cluster headache who had 4 beepers, remember beepers for work back in the seventies?  He had a beeper for his business, one for being the chief of the police department in the small Texas town where he worked, another for being chief of the fire department, and another for his mother, who was sick and bedfast. 

But these social/psychiatric features don’t separate cluster from migraine.  Cluster headache comes the same time every day, multiple attacks every day and they lock into time, like 02:00 AM or at 09:00, every day.  And cluster headaches are quick onset to peak, extremely severe headaches that last an average time of 45 minutes, while migraines onset to peak is lots longer and an episode of migraine can last 4-72 hours.

Chronic migraine due to medication overuse headache is usually a “wake up” headache that gets better after the patient takes his butalbital, only to return hours later as another severe headache.  Medication overuse headache used to be called “rebound headache.”  The headache with medication overuse headache doesn’t really go away, it may persist as pain in the neck of back of head, whereas between attacks cluster headache really goes away.

The big features of cluster  headache are the autonomic features: forehead sweating, one sided lid drooping, a small pupil noted by the very observant patient, or spouse, redness of the conjunctiva, lacrimation, usually just on the one cluster side, and nasal congestion.  Migraine may rarely have some of these features, but migraine has strong throbbing, nausea and vomiting, and sensitivity to light and sound.

The activity of the patient also will give it away.  Cluster headache patients get up and pace around the room.  They are hyper, in extreme pain.  Sometimes they’ll push something sharp like a paper clip in the flesh of their head where it hurts so badly.

Migraine patients go down.  They go to bed, they try to go to sleep, because sleep may reset their brain and treat the migraine.

Read my webpage article on “Medication Overuse Headache May be Confused with Cluster Headache” by clicking here.

How about my Big Book on Migraine?

Will it work?

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All the best.

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Britt Talley Daniel MD