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KOLAKOWSKI ET AL 2026 EFFICACY

Efficacy and effectiveness of anti-CGRP monoclonal antibodies treatment in the prevention of cluster headache attacks: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Year of Publication: 2026

Authors: Lukasz Kolakowski, Marie Therese Kleinsorge, Susanne Wegener, Heiko Pohl

Journal: Cephalalgia

Citation: Kolakowski L, Kleinsorge MT, Wegener S, Pohl H. Efficacy and effectiveness of anti-CGRP monoclonal antibodies treatment in the prevention of cluster headache attacks: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Cephalalgia. 2026;46(4):1-15. doi:10.1177/03331024261434209

Link: https://doi.org/10.1177/03331024261434209


Clinical Question

Do anti-CGRP monoclonal antibodies effectively prevent attacks in episodic and chronic cluster headache?

Bottom Line

Anti-CGRP mAbs provide a statistically significant but modest benefit in episodic cluster headache, with galcanezumab 300 mg and eptinezumab 400 mg outperforming placebo; however, no benefit was demonstrated in chronic cluster headache, and positive results should be interpreted cautiously given endpoint heterogeneity, trial-to-real-world discrepancies, and the modest magnitude of effect.

Major Points

  • Anti-CGRP mAbs significantly increased the ≥50% responder rate versus placebo in eCH at week 4 (OR=1.65, 95% CI 1.07–2.55, p=0.02) based on meta-analysis of 6 randomized placebo-controlled trials
  • Galcanezumab 300 mg individually outperformed placebo in eCH ≥50% responder rate (71% vs 53%, p=0.046; OR CI 1.00–5.05, p=0.05) and was the only agent with a significant reduction in mean weekly attack frequency at week 4 (−8.7 vs −5.2 attacks/week, p=0.04)
  • Eptinezumab 400 mg (ALLEVIATE trial) showed individual superiority over placebo in eCH ≥50% responder rate (67% vs 51%, p=0.02; OR CI 1.12–3.43) but not in weekly frequency reduction
  • Fremanezumab (675 mg and 900 mg) and erenumab did not reach statistical significance versus placebo in eCH on either primary or secondary outcomes; both fremanezumab trials were terminated early due to interim futility
  • No significant benefit was demonstrated for anti-CGRP mAbs in cCH in the meta-analysis (OR=1.07, 95% CI 0.78–1.48, p=0.68); no individual agent outperformed placebo on weekly frequency reduction in cCH
  • Heterogeneity across randomized trials was low to moderate (I²=24%, τ²=0.04)
  • 25 studies were included: 6 double-blind placebo-controlled RCTs, 9 non-randomized prospective studies, and 10 retrospective case series/case reports, totaling 1587 patients
  • Real-world (non-randomized) data suggested higher response rates than controlled trials, representing a reverse efficacy-effectiveness gap potentially due to lack of placebo control and different conceptualizations of therapeutic success

Design

Study Type: Systematic review and meta-analysis

Randomization:

Blinding: Not applicable (meta-analysis); included studies ranged from double-blind placebo-controlled RCTs to retrospective case reports

Allocation: Not applicable

Enrollment Period: Studies published through June 29, 2025; searched June 29, 2025

Follow-up Duration: Varied across included studies (1 week to over 1 year); primary analysis focused on outcomes at 4 weeks post-administration

Centers: 0

Countries: Switzerland

Sample Size: 1587

Analyzed: 1081

Analysis: Random-effects meta-analysis for randomized placebo-controlled trials; descriptive statistics for all studies; odds ratio (OR) with 95% CI for ≥50% responder rate; subgroup analyses by eCH vs cCH; risk of bias assessed using RoB 2 (RCTs) and ROBINS-I (non-randomized studies)

Registration: PROSPERO CRD420250609351


Inclusion Criteria

  • Adults ≥18 years with episodic or chronic cluster headache diagnosed per ICHD-3beta or ICHD-3 criteria
  • Received a monoclonal antibody directed against CGRP or its receptor (erenumab, galcanezumab, fremanezumab, or eptinezumab)
  • Studies with or without comparator arms
  • No pre-specified outcome measures required
  • Published through June 29, 2025
  • Clinical trials, case series, and single case reports

Arms

FieldGalcanezumab 300 mgFremanezumab 675 mgFremanezumab 900 mgEptinezumab 400 mgErenumab 280 mgControl
N16614213910241590
InterventionGalcanezumab 300 mg subcutaneous every 30 daysFremanezumab 675 mg s.c. at week 0; placebo s.c. at weeks 4 and 8Fremanezumab 900 mg s.c. at week 0; 225 mg s.c. at weeks 4 and 8Eptinezumab 400 mg i.v. at week 0; placebo i.v. at week 4Erenumab 280 mg s.c. at week 0; 140 mg s.c. at week 4Placebo (subcutaneous or intravenous, matched to active treatment schedule)
Duration8 weeks (eCH, Goadsby 2019); 12 weeks (cCH, Dodick 2020)12–13 weeks12–13 weeks4 weeks (ALLEVIATE)12 weeks (CHERUB01)Matched to respective active arms

Outcomes

OutcomeTypeControlInterventionHR / OR / RRP-value
≥50% responder rate — proportion of patients achieving ≥50% reduction from baseline in weekly cluster headache attack frequency, assessed at the time point closest to 4 weeks after drug administration; meta-analysis of randomized placebo-controlled trials, subgrouped by eCH and cCHPrimaryPlaceboAnti-CGRP mAbs (pooled)1.650.02 (eCH); 0.68 (cCH)
Secondary−5.2 (SD 1.3)−8.7 (SD 1.4)0.04
Secondary−5.7 (SD 1.00)−5.8 (SD 1.02)ns
Secondary−5.7 (SD 1.00)−7.6 (SD 1.01)ns
Secondary−7.15 (SD 1.07)−8.37 (SD 1.11)ns
Secondary−3.8 (SD 0.8)−4.2 (SD 0.9)ns
Secondary−5.9 (SD 10.5)−7.3 (SD 8.6)ns
Secondary30/57 (53%)35/49 (71%)0.046
Secondary54/106 (51%)68/102 (67%)0.02
Secondary34/57 (60%)29/53 (55%)0.60
Secondary34/57 (60%)41/55 (75%)0.10
Secondary33 (28%)38 (32%)0.40
Secondary18 (45%)13 (32%)0.22
Secondary

Subgroup Analysis

Subgroup analyses performed by cluster headache subtype (eCH vs cCH). Anti-CGRP mAbs were effective in eCH (OR=1.65, p=0.02) but not cCH (OR=1.07, p=0.68). Non-randomized studies reported higher real-world response rates than controlled trials in both subtypes, suggesting a reverse efficacy-effectiveness gap.


Criticisms

  • Small number of RCTs (n=6) limits meta-analysis statistical power
  • Significant heterogeneity in study design, endpoint timing, and outcome reporting across included studies
  • Two fremanezumab trials (NCT02945046 for eCH, NCT02964338 for cCH) terminated early due to interim futility analyses, potentially biasing results toward the null
  • Lack of published categorical data for mean weekly frequency reduction prevented direct p-value calculation; indirect assessments were used instead
  • The ≥50% responder rate endpoint may not adequately capture the full therapeutic impact in cluster headache, and endpoint selection remains contested
  • Discrepancy between real-world data (suggesting greater efficacy) and RCT results raises questions about the adequacy of controlled trial methods in CH
  • European regulatory authorities (EMA) did not approve galcanezumab for CH, citing insufficient efficacy compared to verapamil
  • Other potentially relevant outcomes (acute abortive treatment use, PGI-I scores, attack duration and intensity) were not systematically reported across studies, precluding pooled analysis

Based on: KOLAKOWSKI ET AL 2026 EFFICACY (Cephalalgia, 2026)

Authors: Lukasz Kolakowski, Marie Therese Kleinsorge, Susanne Wegener, Heiko Pohl

Citation: Kolakowski L, Kleinsorge MT, Wegener S, Pohl H. Efficacy and effectiveness of anti-CGRP monoclonal antibodies treatment in the prevention of cluster headache attacks: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Cephalalgia. 2026;46(4):1-15. doi:10.1177/03331024261434209

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