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4th Jun, 2026 12:00 AM
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Experimental Drug Cuts Migraine Days in Mid-stage Trial

LONDON, June 4 (Reuters) - Denmark's Lundbeck said on Thursday its experimental drug bocunebart cut monthly migraine days in ⁠a mid-stage study, supporting further development of a new type of treatment for migraine, one of the ⁠world's most common neurological disorders.

Bocunebart targets a migraine-related pathway called PACAP, which is distinct ⁠from CGRP targeted by some ‌existing preventative drugs, potentially offering an option for patients who do not respond well to current therapies.

• In the intravenous part of the trial, bocunebart met the primary goal in patients with one to four prior preventive ‌treatment failures, reducing monthly migraine days by an average of 4.24 ​days over ‌weeks one to 12, versus ‌2.86 days for placebo.

• That equates to a placebo-adjusted reduction of 1.38 days, Lundbeck said in ⁠data presented at the American Headache Society ‌congress in Orlando, Florida.

• ⁠Jefferies analysts had expected repeated ​intravenous dosing to show a "modest ‌step up" from a prior study, where a single dose cut monthly migraine days by two on a placebo-adjusted basis over four weeks.

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• Lundbeck said ​pooled data across its mid-stage studies for patients ‌with ‌severe, chronic migraine showed a stronger effect, with bocunebart reducing monthly migraine days ‌by 2.31 more ​days than placebo.

• Bocunebart was generally well tolerated, with no new safety signals reported.

• The most common treatment-emergent adverse event, seen in ⁠at least 5% of patients, was nasopharyngitis, or cold-like symptoms.

• ‌Jefferies forecasts peak global sales of $400 million for the drug.

(Reporting by ​Bhanvi Satija. Editing by Mark Potter)


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