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CGRP Inhibitors for Migraine Prevention
If you get four or more migraine days a month and the older preventives have either failed you or wrecked you with side effects, this is the class of drugs to ask your neurologist about. CGRP-targeting drugs are the first migraine preventives actually designed for migraine — six FDA-approved options, ten years of trial data, and a 2024 American Headache Society statement moving them to first-line. About half of patients cut their monthly attack days in half; a meaningful minority do far better than that.
Decide · Daily Evidence Strong Chapter Healthcare

Best preventive class available. Two fewer migraine days a month on average, half of patients halving their monthly count, occasional remission. Tolerability is in a different league from topiramate or amitriptyline — a monthly self-injection or a daily pill, mostly without side effects, no cognitive fog. The catch is access: list prices near $800 a month, prior-authorisation paperwork on most plans, and a slow-onset cardiovascular safety question that won't fully resolve for another decade.

Every migraine attack involves a surge of a single neuropeptide — calcitonin gene-related peptide, or CGRP — released from the sensory nerves that line the membranes around your brain. CGRP widens blood vessels, irritates the surrounding tissue, and turns up the volume on pain signals to the brain. Block CGRP and you blunt the chain reaction before the attack can build.

That is what this class of drugs does. Four of them are monoclonal antibodies — large protein molecules that float around the bloodstream and grab CGRP (or its receptor) before it can bind. You inject one of these yourself, once a month or once every three months, with a small device that looks like an EpiPen. The other two are gepants — small molecules you swallow as a pill, either every day (atogepant) or every other day (rimegepant). Same target, different shape and timing.

What the trials actually show

The honest summary, across more than a dozen large randomised trials and six approved drugs: you can expect about two fewer migraine days a month than you'd get on placebo, and roughly a one-in-two chance of cutting your monthly attack count in half. A smaller group — maybe one in five — does much better than that, and a meaningful number reach near-remission.

Two things to read into those numbers. First, the placebo arms drop a lot too — migraine prevention trials always have big placebo effects, because the act of being in a careful trial changes behaviour and reporting. So the headline "halved my attacks" you might hear from someone on the drug includes a real placebo contribution. Second, the average effect is modest precisely because it is averaged over responders and non-responders together. If you are a responder, you halve your attacks. If you are not, the drug does little, and you should stop after three months and try a different one in the class — switching from a CGRP-receptor drug (erenumab) to a CGRP-ligand drug (the other three antibodies), or to a gepant, recovers response in a real subset of people.

Effect is durable. Open-label extension data out to five years shows no loss of efficacy and no new safety signals beyond what the labels already warn about Reuter et al. 2022.

What changes if it works

Onset depends on which drug. The IV-infused antibody (eptinezumab) can blunt attacks within 24 hours. The self-injected antibodies usually show their hand within the first month and reach full effect by month three. The pills (atogepant, rimegepant) land somewhere in between — meaningful change inside the first few weeks.

For a responder, the first thing that shifts is the calendar. Where you had ten migraine days a month, you have five. Where you had twenty, you have twelve. The days you do still get an attack are often shorter, less severe, or actually answer to a triptan instead of dragging on for two days. You stop counting your week by how many rescue pills you have left in the strip.

The second thing that shifts is the dread. Chronic migraine teaches you to plan around the next attack — you don't book the trip, you don't take the meeting, you don't promise anyone anything because you don't know which days are yours. That anticipation lifts before the attack frequency fully does. Partners notice. Coworkers stop asking if you're okay. The version of you that disappeared into a dark bedroom three afternoons a week stops disappearing.

The third thing is the postdrome. Migraineurs know the "migraine hangover" — the foggy, washed-out day that follows the attack, where reading is hard and decisions feel heavy. Fewer attacks means fewer of those days. Focus and energy return on the days you would previously have lost to recovery.

Sleep often gets a smaller bonus. Fewer 4 a.m. attacks pulling you out of bed, fewer evenings spent talking yourself into a triptan instead of dinner, fewer nights staring at the ceiling wondering whether tomorrow is one of the bad days. The drug doesn't act on sleep directly — but the absence of migraine in the background of your night is its own quiet improvement.

None of this is a cure. A meaningful minority of patients does reach near-zero attacks, but most responders go from frequent to occasional, not from frequent to none. Honesty about that is part of the deal — overselling these drugs is the fastest way to be disappointed when the third migraine day of the month still arrives.

What you'd actually take

Six approved drugs, two shapes. You pick one with a neurologist — there is no head-to-head trial telling you the answer, so the choice usually comes down to which delivery suits your life, which one your insurance will pay for, and what other conditions you have.

Give it three months. The American Headache Society defines a fair trial as roughly twelve weeks at the standard dose; before that you're guessing. If you're not at a 30–50% reduction in monthly migraine days by then, switch within the class — receptor-target to ligand-target, or antibody to gepant. Non-response to one is not non-response to all of them.

When to be careful

The cost and the paperwork

US list prices in 2026 sit at roughly $700–$815 a month for the injectable antibodies, around $1,150 a month for atogepant, and about $2,000 per quarterly infusion for eptinezumab. Without insurance, that's roughly $8,000–$12,000 a year. With commercial insurance, manufacturer copay programs (BridgeProgram, Ajovy Copay Card, Emgality Savings, the Aimovig Co-Pay Program) generally bring the out-of-pocket cost to near zero — under $5 a month for many patients. Medicare patients are usually shut out of those programs and pay specialty-tier copays unless they qualify for extra-help.

The bigger friction is the prior-authorisation form. Most insurers still want documentation that you have at least four migraine days a month and that you have already tried and failed two classes of older preventives — typically topiramate plus one of propranolol, amitriptyline, or valproate. Chronic-migraine plans sometimes require an onabotulinumtoxinA trial first. The 2024 American Headache Society statement asks insurers to drop this requirement, and about 45% of US commercial plans have, but most still ask Charles et al. 2024.

What helps in practice: a neurologist who handles a lot of these (rather than primary care), a clear written record of every previous preventive you tried with doses and durations, and patience for the first appeal. Approval usually comes through within a few weeks if the paperwork is clean. Adherence at one year runs around 50–60% — substantially better than the ~25% rate for topiramate over the same horizon, mostly because the side-effect burden is lower.

What people get wrong

  • "These drugs cure migraine." They don't. They reduce attack frequency. A minority of patients go from frequent to near-zero, but the typical responder goes from frequent to occasional. Plan around that.
  • "If one didn't work, the class doesn't work for me." Wrong, often. The receptor-binding antibody (erenumab) and the three ligand-binding antibodies (fremanezumab, galcanezumab, eptinezumab) sometimes produce different individual responses; switching across that line, or to one of the gepants, recovers response in a meaningful subset.
  • "They work like Botox." Both are effective preventives, but they are different drugs aimed at different parts of the system. Botox is a quarterly grid of 31–39 small injections in the head and neck that blocks neurotransmitter release at the nerve ending. A CGRP drug is a single monthly injection (or daily pill) that blocks one specific signal. Many chronic-migraine patients eventually use both together.
  • "Insurance covers them as first-line now." The guideline says yes; most American insurers still say no. The position statement is a recommendation, not a mandate.
  • "The trial numbers look small, so the drug must be weak." The average effect is modest because the average pools responders with non-responders. If you are a responder, the personal effect is much larger than two days a month — closer to halving your monthly count.

Where this goes wrong

  • You don't respond. About a third of patients don't reach a 50% reduction after a fair three-month trial. The fix is to switch drugs within the class, not to abandon the class. If you also don't respond to a second drug with a different target (receptor vs ligand, antibody vs gepant), that's a real signal — go back to your neurologist.
  • You quietly have medication-overuse headache. If you've been taking a triptan or daily ibuprofen for years, some of your "migraine days" may actually be rebound headache. The CGRP drug helps less than it should until the rescue medication is withdrawn — usually a planned taper alongside starting the preventive.
  • You stop the drug after it worked. Discontinuing a CGRP antibody after sustained good response usually means your monthly migraine days drift back toward baseline over the next three to six months. Some patients re-respond on restart; some don't fully. This isn't withdrawal, but it isn't a free pause either.
  • The blood-pressure cuff finds something. A first dose of erenumab that triggers an unexpected jump in blood pressure is uncommon but documented; this is exactly why the early checks matter. Switch to a ligand-binding antibody or a gepant if it happens.
  • Insurance asks for one more thing. A first denial isn't the answer; it's the opening move. A clean appeal with the prior-preventive history attached is approved more often than not.

Adjacent topics worth a look:

  • Acute migraine treatment — triptans, ditans, and the acute-use gepants (ubrogepant, rimegepant on-demand, zavegepant nasal). Prevention reduces attacks; rescue treatment ends the ones that still happen.
  • OnabotulinumtoxinA for chronic migraine — a different mechanism, quarterly injections, often used alongside or before CGRP drugs.
  • Legacy oral preventives — topiramate, propranolol, amitriptyline, candesartan, valproate — still on the menu, still required by some insurers as the step before a CGRP drug.
  • Migraine trigger management — sleep regularity, hydration, caffeine pattern, identified food and sensory triggers. None replace prevention drugs at high attack frequency, but they meaningfully shift the floor.
  • Medication-overuse headache — the often-missed background that limits how well any preventive works.
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