4.4 Article

Salivary CGRP can monitor the different migraine phases: CGRP (in)dependent attacks

Journal

CEPHALALGIA
Volume 42, Issue 3, Pages 186-196

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/03331024211040467

Keywords

Migraine; migraine phases; ELISA; CGRP; saliva

Funding

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [ISCIII - PI16/01525]
  2. Headache Study Group of the Spanish Neurological Society 2018

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study found that salivary CGRP-LI levels were elevated in episodic migraine patients during interictal periods, and usually increased during migraine attacks in most patients. However, not every attack was CGRP-dependent, indicating potential differences in underlying pathophysiology and treatment response.
Background CGRP plays a key role in the transmission and modulation of nociceptive signals and is a critical component in the pathogenesis of migraine. Objective To assess saliva as a substrate to measure CGRP by comparing interictal levels in patients with episodic migraine and controls; and to evaluate CGRP's temporal profile during migraine attacks. Methods This prospective observational pilot study included young women with episodic migraine and healthy controls. We monitored salivary CGRP-like immunoreactivity (CGRP-LI) during 30 consecutive days and during migraine attacks. We considered six timepoints for the analysis: interictal (72h headache free), preictal (PRE-24h before the attack), ictal (headache onset, after 2h, after 8h), postictal (POST-24h after the attack). CGRP levels were quantified by ELISA. Results 44 women (22 with episodic migraine, 22 healthy controls) were recruited. Differences in interictal salivary levels of CGRP between patients and controls (Me [IQR]: 98.0 [80.3] (95% CI 56.6, 124.0) vs. 54.3 [44.0] (95% CI 42.2, 70.1) pg/mL, p = 0.034) were found. An increase in CGRP levels during migraine attacks was detected (pre:169.0 [95% CI 104.2-234.0]; headache onset: 247.0 [181.9-312.0]; after 2h: 143.0 [77.6-208.0]; after 8h: 169.0 [103.5-234.0], post: 173.0 [107.8-238.0]). Patients were classified as having CGRP-dependent (79.6%) and non-CGRP dependent migraine attacks (20.4%) according to the magnitude of change between preictal and ictal phase. Accompanying symptoms such as photophobia and phonophobia were significantly associated to the first group. Conclusions Salivary CGRP-LI levels, which interictally are elevated in episodic migraine patients, usually increase during a migraine attack in the majority of patients. However, not every attack is CGRP-dependent, which in turn, might explain different underlying pathophysiology and response to treatment.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available