Table 3.
Study Design | N | Intervention | Comparison | Outcomes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Open label trial | 44 | Riboflavin 400 mg daily (23/44 received aspirin 75 mg daily) | N/A | A 68.2% improvement in migraine severity score, no difference between the aspirin-treated and non-aspirin-treated groups (p-value not reported) | Schoenen et al., 1994 [96] |
RCT | 55 | 400 mg daily | Placebo for three months (n = 27) | Riboflavin significantly reduced the frequency of seizures (p = 0.005) and the number of headache days (p = 0.012) when compared with the placebo group | Schoenen et al., 1998 [9] |
Open label trial | 26 | 400 mg daily vs. bisoprolol 10 mg daily or metoprolol 200 mg daily | N/A | Headache frequency was significantly reduced (p < 0.05) in both groups, but there was no difference between the two groups | Sándor et al., 2000 [97] |
Open label trial | 23 | 400 mg daily | N/A | Headache frequency significantly decreased from 4 days/month at baseline to 2 days/month at three and six months (p < 0.05) | Boehnke et al., 2004 [98] |
Open label trial | 64 | 400 mg daily | N/A | 62.5% responded and haplotype H was associated with a reduced probability of responding to riboflavin (OR, 0.24; 95% confidence interval [0.08, 0.71]) | Di Lorenzo et al., 2009 [99] |
RCT | 100 | 100 mg daily for at least three months | Propranolol 80 mg daily for at least three months (n = 50) | A greater reduction in migraine frequency in the propranolol group at one month (p < 0.001), but no difference between the groups at three and six months | Nambiar NJ et al., 2011 [11] |
RCT | 90 | 400 mg/day | Sodium valproate 500 mg/day | The frequency, median duration per month, and severity of headache decreased in both groups, but the difference between them was not significant (p > 0.05). However, the vitamin B2 group had significantly fewer side effects (p = 0.005). | Rahimd et al., 2015 [100] |
RCT, randomized controlled trial; N/A, not available.