Atogepant

Clinical trials are studying Atogepant in people with migraine, including adults and children. These studies look at how well it works, how safe it is, and how well people tolerate it for prevention or acute treatment. The trials include menstrual migraine, episodic migraine, chronic migraine, and pediatric migraine.

Table of Contents

Clinical trial overview

The trial program for Atogepant focuses on migraine in different patient groups, including adults, children, and teens.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

All listed studies are Phase 3 trials, which means they are later-stage studies that test how well a treatment works and how safe it is in larger groups of people.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Most of the studies are testing preventive treatment, while one study is testing Atogepant for the acute treatment of a single migraine attack.[1][2]

Menstrual migraine study

One authorized Phase 3 study is evaluating Atogepant for the preventive treatment of menstrual migraine in 448 participants.[1]

This study compares Atogepant with placebo and looks at the change in the number of migraine days during the perimenstrual period, which means the time around a menstrual period.[1]

The main outcome is measured across 3 menstrual cycles during the double-blind period, where neither participants nor study staff know which treatment is being given.[1]

Acute migraine treatment study

The ECLIPSE study is a Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in 1,785 participants with migraine.[2]

It is studying Atogepant as a single-dose treatment for one migraine attack, with an open-label extension afterward, which means some participants may later know they are taking the study drug.[2]

The main endpoint is pain freedom at 2 hours after the dose for the first attack, meaning the headache changes from moderate or severe pain to no pain.[2]

Pediatric migraine studies

Two Phase 3 studies are focused on children and teens with migraine.[3][4]

One long-term extension study includes participants 6 to 17 years of age and is designed to assess safety and tolerability over time in 586 pediatric participants.[3]

This study tracks adverse events, lab tests, ECG results, vital signs, suicidal thoughts or behavior, menstrual cycle assessments in female participants, Tanner stage, and BRIEF2 results, which help assess behavior and executive function, meaning planning and self-control skills.[3]

Another pediatric study includes 450 participants aged 6 to 17 years with episodic migraine and measures the change in mean monthly migraine days over a 12-week treatment period.[4]

A separate pediatric study in chronic migraine includes participants 12 to 17 years of age and looks at safety and efficacy in 426 participants.[6]

Adult comparison with topiramate

The TEMPLE study is a Phase 3 trial in 520 adult participants with chronic and episodic migraine.[5]

It compares Atogepant with topiramate, another migraine preventive treatment, to see how often participants stop treatment because of adverse events during a 24-week double-blind period.[5]

This study is especially focused on tolerability, meaning whether people can stay on treatment without stopping because of unwanted medical problems.[5]

Long-term prevention study

One completed Phase 3 open-label study examined Atogepant 60 mg once daily for up to 156 weeks in 596 participants with chronic or episodic migraine, including migraine without aura, migraine with aura, and chronic migraine.[7]

The main outcome was the percentage of participants with at least one treatment-emergent adverse event, which means a medical problem that started or got worse after treatment began.[7]

Because the study was open-label, participants knew what treatment they were receiving.[7]

Main trial outcomes

Across the studies, the main outcomes include changes in migraine days, pain freedom, adverse events, and treatment discontinuation because of side effects.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]

The pediatric studies also add growth, puberty, heart rhythm, lab, and behavior measures, showing that the research is not only about migraine control but also about long-term safety in younger patients.[3][6]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
2024-512946-41-00 Phase 3 Menstrual Migraine Authorised 448
NCT06241313 Phase 3 Migraine Authorised 1785
NCT05707949 Phase 3 Migraine Authorised 586
NCT05711394 Phase 3 Episodic Migraine Authorised 450
NCT05748483 Phase 3 Chronic and Episodic Migraine Authorised 520
NCT04686136 Phase 3 Chronic or Episodic Migraine Completed 596
NCT06810505 Phase 3 Chronic Migraine Authorised 426

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Atogepant

  • Study on the Safety and Effectiveness of Atogepant for Preventing Chronic Migraine in Children Aged 12 to 17

    Recruiting

    1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Denmark Hungary Italy The Netherlands Poland Portugal
  • Study on the Safety and Effectiveness of Atogepant for Preventing Episodic Migraine in Children and Teens Aged 6 to 17

    Recruiting

    1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Belgium Denmark France Hungary Italy The Netherlands +4
  • Study on Long-term Safety and Tolerability of Atogepant for Children and Teens (Ages 6-17) with Migraine

    Recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Belgium Denmark France Hungary Italy The Netherlands +5
  • Study on Atogepant for Preventing Menstrual Migraine in Women

    Not recruiting

    1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Czechia Germany Hungary Italy Poland Portugal +1
  • Study on Atogepant for Treating Migraine in Patients: Evaluating Effectiveness and Safety

    Not recruiting

    1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Belgium Czechia Germany Hungary Italy Poland +4
  • Study Comparing Atogepant and Topiramate for Preventive Treatment in Adults with Migraine

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Austria Belgium Czechia France Germany Hungary +3
  • Study on Long-Term Safety of Atogepant for Preventing Migraine in Patients with Chronic or Episodic Migraine

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Czechia Denmark France Germany Hungary Italy +3

Glossary

  • Migraine: A long-term headache disorder that can cause moderate to severe head pain and other symptoms.
  • Menstrual migraine: Migraine that happens around the time of a menstrual period.
  • Episodic migraine: Migraine that happens on some days, but not as often as chronic migraine.
  • Chronic migraine: Migraine that happens very often, usually on many days each month.
  • Phase 3: A late stage of clinical research that tests a treatment in larger groups of people.
  • Placebo: An inactive treatment used for comparison in a trial.
  • Double-blind: A study design where participants and researchers do not know who gets the study drug or placebo.
  • Efficacy: How well a treatment works in a study.
  • Safety: How often harmful effects or medical problems happen during the study.
  • Tolerability: How well people can take the treatment without stopping because of side effects or discomfort.
  • Adverse event: Any medical problem that happens during a study, whether or not it is caused by the treatment.
  • Primary endpoint: The main result the trial is designed to measure.