They’re called suicide headaches because the pain is frequent and unbearable.
Commonly known as cluster headaches, they can occur up to eight times a day. They start suddenly, last for up to three hours, and can be very painful. A bout of regular attacks, known as a cluster bout, can last weeks to months.
Dr. Elspeth Hutton runs Australia’s largest headache clinic at the Alfred Hospital, which has been operating since 2013. She’s also head of the peripheral neuropathy, pain and headache research at the new Monash University Department of Neuroscience.
Dr. Hutton is currently recruiting for a trial of people with cluster headaches, which affects 0.4 percent of Australians and is “so bad that people can’t stand it; they will sometimes hit their heads against a wall in an effort to relieve the pain”, she said.
Patients with cluster headaches will be treated with a new drug, Fremanezumab (Teva), a monoclonal antibody that binds to a protein called CGRP. It’s in the same class of drugs as the recently Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)-approved Erenumab. CGRP is an important transmitter of pain signals in a headache. Other trial centers of this treatment for cluster headaches are in Europe and the United States.
According to Dr. Hutton, current treatments for cluster headaches include oral medications, nerve blocks, oxygen and steroids, “all of which have serious side effects, and variable effectiveness. The CGRP antagonists offer a potential for a new effective treatment with minimal side effects,” she said.
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