Effectiveness and tolerability of liraglutide as add-on treatment in patients with obesity and [...] migraine: A prospective pilot, 2025, Braca et al

forestglip

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Effectiveness and tolerability of liraglutide as add-on treatment in patients with obesity and high-frequency or chronic migraine: A prospective pilot study

Simone Braca, Cinzia Valeria Russo, Antonio Stornaiuolo, Gennaro Cretella, Angelo Miele, Caterina Giannini, Roberto De Simone

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Objective
To assess whether glucagon-like-peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonists could serve as a novel prophylactic treatment for migraine in patients with obesity.

Background
Increased intracranial pressure (ICP) is speculated to play a role in migraine mechanisms, as chronic migraine and idiopathic intracranial hypertension without papilledema (IIWHOP) are often clinically indistinguishable. These striking similarities suggest a deep pathogenetic link between the two conditions posing the hypothesis that control of ICP may be helpful in migraine treatment.

The GLP-1R agonists have been shown to greatly reduce ICP. Notably, they have also been demonstrated to decrease calcitonin gene-related peptide expression in chronic migraine models.

Methods
This was a prospective, interventional, open-label, pilot cohort study, evaluating the effectiveness of liraglutide as an add-on treatment of unresponsive migraine in patients with obesity. We consecutively enrolled patients with high-frequency or chronic migraine and a body mass index (BMI) of >30 kg/m2, and unresponsive to at least two preventive treatments. We excluded patients with papilledema, sixth nerve palsy, or pulsatile tinnitus, to rule out patients in which idiopathic intracranial hypertension could be clinically suspected. Liraglutide was administered 1.2 mg daily.

The study was conducted from January to July 2024, with a 12-week follow-up period. The primary outcome of this study was the reduction of monthly days with headache after 12 weeks of treatment with liraglutide compared to baseline.

Results
We enrolled 31 patients (26 females, five males, with a mean [standard deviation, SD] age of 44.9 [14.6] years). The mean (SD) monthly days with headache decreased from 19.8 (6.7) to 10.7 (7.7) days post-treatment. This change was significant with a mean difference of 9.1 days (95% confidence interval [CI] 5.41–12.84, p < 0.001, Cohen's d: 0.90).

Conversely, BMI decreased slightly from a mean (SD) of 34.0 (2.3) to 33.9 (2.3) kg/m2, and this change was not significant (mean difference = 0.1 kg/m2, 95% CI −0.004 to 0.153 kg/m2, p = 0.060, Cohen's d: 0.34).

Analysis of covariance indicated that age, sex, and concomitant medications did not significantly influence headache frequency reduction (all p > 0.050). Simple linear regression analysis showed that BMI reduction did not significantly predict headache frequency reduction (β = −1.448, 95% CI −19.390 to 16.495, p = 0.870, R2 = 0.001), indicating no meaningful relationship between the two variables.

Conclusion
Our findings show that liraglutide may be effective in the treatment of unresponsive high-frequency or chronic migraine in patients with obesity, and that this effect is independent from weight loss. Although further studies are needed to clarify this topic, these findings generate the hypothesis that a derangement in ICP control may play a role in migraine pathogenesis and potentially represent a novel therapeutic target.

Link | PDF (Headache) [Open Access]
 
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Neuroscience News: 'GLP-1 Drug Cuts Migraine Days in Half'



"A diabetes medication that lowers brain fluid pressure has cut monthly migraine days by more than half, according to a new study presented today at the European Academy of Neurology (EAN) Congress 2025.

Researchers at the Headache Centre of the University of Naples “Federico II” gave the glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist liraglutide to 26 adults with obesity and chronic migraine (defined as ≥15 headache days per month).

Patients reported an average of 11 fewer headache days per month, while disability scores on the Migraine Disability Assessment Test dropped by 35 points, indicating a clinically meaningful improvement in work, study, and social functioning."



"Importantly, while participants’ body-mass index declined slightly (from 34.01 to 33.65), this change was not statistically significant. An analysis of covariance confirmed that BMI reduction had no effect on headache frequency, strengthening the hypothesis that pressure modulation, not weight loss, drives the benefit."



"“We think that, by modulating cerebrospinal fluid pressure and reducing intracranial venous sinuses compression, these drugs produce a decrease in the release of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), a key migraine-promoting peptide”, Dr Braca explained.

“That would pose intracranial pressure control as a brand-new, pharmacologically targetable pathway.”"



"Following this exploratory 12-week pilot study, a randomised, double-blind trial with direct or indirect intracranial pressure measurement is now being planned by the same research team in Naples, led by professor Roberto De Simone."
 
Thanks @forestglip

With the open label, it's possible that the participants had an incentive to report fewer headache days, so they could stay on the drug, nominally for the migraine control but primarily for the weight loss benefit. That seems likely if the drug would be subsidised as a migraine drug, but not for weight loss. It would be easy to bias headache day reports - do you count the days when you only had the migraine for part of the day?

The blinded trial will be interesting.

I think quite a few of us with ME/CFS have trouble with migraines, possibly associated more often with PEM. If intracranial pressure is a factor causing migraine, maybe that tells us something about the pathology of PEM? I know there's a lot of assumptions in that.

I'm surprised at the low change in BMI. A mean BMI change from 34.01 to 33.65 does not seem much for 12 weeks, and it wasn't statistically significant.
 
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