Medical Policy

Policy Num:      07.001.167
Policy Name:    Remote Electrical Neuromodulation for Migraines
Policy ID:          [07.001.167] [Ac / B / M+ / P+]  [7.01.171]


Last Review:     November 05, 2025
Next Review:     November 20, 2026
 

Related Policies: None

Remote Electrical Neuromodulation for Migraines

Population Reference No.

Populations

Interventions

Comparators

Outcomes

1

Individuals:

         ·        Who are individuals with an acute migraine due to              episodic or chronic migraine

Interventions of interest are:

         ·        Remote electrical neuromodulation

Comparators of interest are:

  • Medical management
  • No treatment

Relevant outcomes include:

  • Symptoms
  • Functional outcomes
  • Quality of life
  • Treatment-related morbidity

2

Individuals:

          ·        Adults (ages 18 years and above) with episodic or              chronic migraines who may benefit from preventive            treatment

Interventions of interest are:

          ·        Remote electrical neuromodulation

Comparators of interest are:

  • Medical management
  • No treatment

Relevant outcomes include:

  • Symptoms
  • Functional outcomes
  • Quality of life
  • Treatment-related morbidity

3

Individuals:

           ·       Adolescents (ages 12-18 years) with episodic or                 chronic migraines who may benefit from preventive             treatment

Interventions of interest are:

          ·        Remote electrical neuromodulation

Comparators of interest are:

  • Medical management
  • No treatment

Relevant outcomes include:

  • Symptoms
  • Functional outcomes
  • Quality of life
  • Treatment-related morbidity

4

Individuals:

          ·        Children (ages 8-11 years) with episodic or chronic              migraines who may benefit from preventive                          treatment

Interventions of interest are:

          ·        Remote electrical neuromodulation

Comparators of interest are:

  • Medical management
  • No treatment

Relevant outcomes include:

  • Symptoms
  • Functional outcomes
  • Quality of life
  • Treatment-related morbidity

SUMMARY

Description

Migraine attacks due to episodic or chronic migraine require acute management. Some individuals may also require preventive migraine therapy. Current first-line therapy for treatment and prevention of acute migraine involves use of various pharmacologic interventions. Regular use of pharmacologic interventions can result in medication overuse and increased risk of progression from episodic to chronic migraine. Nonpharmacologic remote electrical neuromodulation (REN) may offer an alternative to pharmacologic interventions for patients with migraine.

Summary of Evidence

For individuals with acute migraine due to episodic or chronic migraine who receive remote electrical neuromodulation (REN), the evidence includes 2 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and nonrandomized, uncontrolled studies. Relevant outcomes are symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, and treatment-related morbidity. Use of an active REN device resulted in more patients with improved pain and symptoms at 2-hour follow-up compared with a sham device based on 2 RCTs (N=212) with numerous relevance limitations. Based on the existing evidence, it is unclear how Nerivio would fit into the current acute migraine management pathway. No significant between-group difference in functional disability or quality of life was noted in a post-hoc analysis of the pivotal RCT. Additionally, controlled studies in adolescent and pediatric populations are lacking. The evidence is insufficient to determine that the technology results in an improvement in the net health outcome.

For adult individuals who may benefit from preventive migraine therapy, including those with frequent or long-lasting episodic or chronic migraines, migraine attacks that diminish quality of life or cause significant disability despite acute treatment, contraindications to or failure of acute therapies, and risk of medication overuse headache, who receive REN, the evidence includes 1 RCT and 1 prospective, observational study. Relevant outcomes are symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, and treatment-related morbidity. Use of an active REN device resulted in more adults with decreased migraine days per month, regardless of episodic or chronic subtype, when used every other day for 8 weeks compared with a sham device based on 1 RCT (N=248). Prospective, observational data in 2 real world evidence studies using the device for acute treatment of migraine demonstrated a significant reduction in migraine headache days from baseline to months 2 and 3 with device use in adolescent patients. Based on the existing evidence, it is unclear how Nerivio would fit into the current migraine prevention pathway, although it could provide benefit for those who do not receive adequate benefit from pharmacologic first- or second-line therapies, or who may have a contraindication to pharmacologic therapies. The evidence is sufficient to determine that the technology results in an improvement in the net health outcome.

For adolescent individuals who may benefit from preventive migraine therapy who receive REN, the evidence includes data from the summary submitted in the FDA approval packet and 1 RWE analysis. The data in the FDA summary were collected from adolescents who used the device for acute migraine treatment, but use was equivalent to the suggested preventive use (10 times per month or higher). There was substantial reduction from baseline during months 2 and 3 of device use. This data is limited by a lack of comparator and no description of medications or alternative interventions patients were additionally using. A prospective, real-world evidence analysis investigated the use of Nerivio in adolescents over a 3 month period. There was a statistically significant monthly reduction in mean monthly migraine treatment days. Well-defined, controlled studies are required to confirm benefit in this population. The evidence is insufficient to determine that the technology results in an improvement in the net health outcome.

For children who may benefit from preventive migraine therapy who receive REN, the evidence includes the FDA summary for the expanded approval of preventive use of Nerivio in pediatric patients (ages 8-11) based on a retrospective real-world analysis. Preventive use of the device was assumed by analyzing patients whose frequency of use in month one was suggestive of preventive treatments. No specific data on proportion of patients in whom preventive use was assumed or efficacy outcomes in the assumed preventive use population were reported. Well-defined, controlled studies are required to confirm benefit in this population. The evidence is insufficient to determine that the technology results in an improvement in the net health outcome.

Additional Information

2025 Input

Clinical input was sought to help determine whether the use of remote electrical neuromodulation (i.e., Nerivio) for the listed populations would provide a clinically meaningful improvement in net health outcome and represents generally accepted medical practice:

In response to structured requests, clinical input was received from 4 respondents, including 1 physician-level respondent identified by the American Academy of Neurology (AAN), and 3 physician-level responses identified by various academic medical centers. In addition, an informal response was provided by the American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Neurology (AAP).

Clinical input supports this use provides a clinically meaningful benefit, with the majority of respondents supportive that its use is consistent with generally accepted medical practice, although the societal responses were neutral. Respondents noted that all patients with migraine may benefit from a nonpharmacologic option for either stand-alone or adjunctive use, particularly among those who have failed other options, who have contraindications or an intolerance to alternatives, who are at risk for or have a history of medication overuse headache, or who are at risk of drug-drug interactions. While some clinicians trial acute treatment with REN first, failure in the abortive setting does not preclude success with preventive use. Additionally, clinicians support first-line use of REN for acute or preventive treatment, particularly in adolescent and pediatric populations where there are limited alternatives with evidence of efficacy or tolerable side effect profiles. Respondents emphasize that the discreet nature of the REN device is ideal for use by children and adolescents in the school setting.

Further details from clinical input are included in the Appendix.

Objective

The objective of this evidence review is to determine whether acute treatment or preventive treatment with remote electrical neuromodulation improves the net health outcome in patients with episodic or chronic migraine.

Policy statements

Acute treatment

Remote electrical neuromodulation for acute migraine is considered investigational.

Preventive treatment: Initiation of Use

Remote electrical neuromodulation (REN [e.g. Nerivio]) for the prevention of migraine may be considered medically necessary in individuals when the following criteria are met:

Preventive treatment: Continuation of Use

Continued use of the REN device and/or accessories for the prevention of migraine is considered medically necessary in individuals when the following criteria are met:

Remote electrical neuromodulation for prevention of migraine outside of the above criteria is considered investigational (see Policy Guidelines Considerations).

Policy Guidelines

Remote Electrical Neuromodulation Contraindications

Nerivio is contraindicated in patients with uncontrolled epilepsy and patients with an active implantable medical device, such as a pacemaker, hearing aid implant, or any implanted electronic device. Nerivio has not been evaluated in patients with congestive heart failure, severe cardiac or cerebrovascular disease, pregnancy, or patients under the age of 8 years.

Considerations

There is significant unmet need for migraine treatments, including lack of access. Plans may need to consider local issues in determining coverage, particularly in pediatric populations. Clinical input respondents note that first-line use is especially recommended in children and adolescents due to limited alternatives with demonstrated efficacy or tolerable adverse effects. Reduction in school absenteeism is recommended in this age group to ascertain clinical benefit.

Remote electrical neuromodulation (REN [e.g. Nerivio]) for the prevention of migraine may be considered medically necessary in individuals when the following criteria are met:

Criteria for Migraine

The International Classification of Headache Disorders ICDH-3 criteria for migraine with and without aura can be accessed at https://ichd-3.org/1-migraine/.

Clinical Benefit for Continuation of Use

Documentation of clinical benefit for continuation of use may include a clinician attestation regarding any of the following outcomes:

Based on observed outcomes of pivotal studies of Nerivio and study duration recommendations from the International Headache Society concerning migraine neuromodulation trial designs, assessment for clinical benefit is reasonable after a minimum of 8-12 weeks for preventive treatment.

Coding

See the Codes table for details.

Benefit Application

BlueCard/National Account Issues

State or federal mandates (eg, Federal Employee Program) may dictate that certain U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved devices, drugs, or biologics may not be considered investigational, and thus these devices may be assessed only by their medical necessity.

Benefits are determined by the group contract, member benefit booklet, and/or individual subscriber certificate in effect at the time services were rendered.  Benefit products or negotiated coverages may have all or some of the services discussed in this medical policy excluded from their coverage.

Background

Migraine

Migraine is a neurologic disease characterized by recurrent moderate to severe headaches with associated symptoms that can include aura, photophobia, nausea, and/or vomiting.1, Overall migraine prevalence in the United States is about 15% but varies according to population group.2, Prevalence is higher in women (21%), among American Indian/Alaska Natives (22%), and among 18- to 44-year-olds (19%). Social determinants including low education level (18%), use of Medicaid (27%), high poverty level (23%), and being unemployed (22%) are also associated with higher rates of migraine.

Migraine is categorized as episodic or chronic depending on the frequency of attacks. Generally, episodic migraine is characterized by 14 or fewer headache days per month and chronic migraine is characterized by 15 or more headache days per month.3, Specific International Classification of Headache Disorders4, diagnostic criteria are as follows:

Migraine attacks, whether due to episodic or chronic migraine, require acute management. The goal of acute treatment is to provide pain and symptom relief as quickly as possible while minimizing adverse effects, with the intent of timely return to normal function. Pharmacologic interventions for treatment of acute migraine vary according to migraine severity. First-line therapy for an acute episode of mild or moderate migraine includes oral non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or acetaminophen. Moderate to severe migraine can be treated through the use of triptans or an NSAID-triptan combination. Antiemetics can be added for migraine accompanied by nausea or vomiting, though certain antiemetic medications used as monotherapy can also provide migraine relief. Other pharmacologic interventions used to treat acute migraine include calcitonin-gene related peptide antagonists, which can be used in patients with an insufficient response or contraindications to triptans, lasmiditan, and dihydroergotamine. Migraine can be managed at home, although acute migraine is a frequently cited reason for primary care and emergency department visits.5, Regular use of pharmacologic interventions can result in medication overuse, which in turn could lead to rebound headache and increased risk of progression from episodic to chronic migraine.4,

Many individuals who suffer from migraine may also benefit from preventive migraine therapy, including those with frequent or long-lasting migraines, migraine attacks that diminish quality of life or cause significant disability despite acute treatment, contraindications to or failure of acute therapies, and risk of medication overuse headache.6,7,8, The main goals of preventive therapy are to reduce future attack frequency, severity, and duration, improve responsiveness to acute treatments, improve function and reduce disability, and prevent progression of episodic migraine to chronic migraine. For most adults with episodic migraines who may benefit from preventive therapy, initial therapy with an antiepileptic drug (divalproex sodium, sodium valproate, topiramate) or beta-blockers (metoprolol, propranolol, timolol) is recommended. Frovatriptan may be beneficial as initial therapy for prevention of menstrually associated migraine. Antidepressants (amitriptyline, venlafaxine), alternative beta-blockers (atenolol, nadolol), and additional triptans (naratriptan, zolmitriptan for menstrually associated migraine prevention) may be considered if initial therapy is unsuccessful. For preventive treatment of pediatric migraine, many children and adolescents who received placebo in clinical trials improved and most preventive medications were not superior to placebo. Possibly effective preventive treatment options for children and adolescents may include amitriptyline, topiramate, or propranolol.

Remote Electrical Neuromodulation

Remote electrical neuromodulation (REN) may offer an alternative to pharmacologic interventions for patients with acute migraine or it may decrease the use of abortive or preventive medications and the risk of medication overuse to treat or prevent acute migraines. The only currently available REN device (Nerivio™) cleared for use by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is worn on the upper arm and stimulates the peripheral nerves to induce conditioned pain modulation (CPM). The conditioned pain in the arm induced by the Nerivio REN device is believed to reduce the perceived migraine pain intensity.9, Control of the REN device is accomplished through Bluetooth communication between the device and the patient's smartphone or tablet. For acute treatment, at onset of migraine or aura and no later than within 1 hour of onset, the user initiates use of the device through their mobile application. When used for preventive treatment, the device should be used every other day, controlled by the individual through their smartphone or tablet application. Patient-controlled stimulation intensity ranges from 0% to 100%, corresponding to 0 to 40 milliamperes (mA) of electrical current. Patients are instructed to set the device to the strongest stimulation intensity that is just below their perceived pain level. The device provides stimulation for up to 45 minutes before turning off automatically. The Nerivio manufacturer indicates that the device can be used instead of or in addition to medication.

Regulatory Status

In May 2019, Nerivio Migra™ (Theranica Bio-Electronics Ltd.) was granted a de novo classification by the FDA (class II, special controls, product code: QGT).10, This new classification applied to this device and substantially equivalent devices of this generic type. Nerivio Migra was initially cleared for treatment of acute migraine in adults who do not have chronic migraine.

In October 2020, Nerivio was cleared for marketing by the FDA through the 510(k) process (K201824). FDA determined that this device was substantially equivalent to Nerivio Migra for use in adults.11, The device name changed to just “Nerivio” and the exclusion of chronic migraine patients was removed. The Nerivio device can provide more treatments than the predicate Nerivio Migra (12 treatments vs. 8 treatments) and has a longer shelf life (24 months vs. 9 months). In January 2021, the Nerivio device was cleared for use in patients aged 12 to 17 years.12, In February 2023, Nerivio's indication was expanded to include preventive treatment of migraine with or without aura in individuals 12 years and age or older and was cleared for marketing through the 510(k) process (K223169).13,In May 2025, the Nerivio and rechargeable Nerivio Infinity devices were cleared for marketing (K241756) with an expanded indication for acute and/or preventive treatment of migraine with or without aura in patients 8 years and older.14,

Rationale

This evidence review was created in March 2022 with a search of the PubMed database. The most recent literature update was performed through August 18, 2025.

Evidence reviews assess the clinical evidence to determine whether the use of a technology improves the net health outcome. Broadly defined, health outcomes are length of life, quality of life, and ability to function including benefits and harms. Every clinical condition has specific outcomes that are important to patients and to managing the course of that condition. Validated outcome measures are necessary to ascertain whether a condition improves or worsens; and whether the magnitude of that change is clinically significant. The net health outcome is a balance of benefits and harms.

To assess whether the evidence is sufficient to draw conclusions about the net health outcome of a technology, 2 domains are examined: the relevance and the quality and credibility. To be relevant, studies must represent 1 or more intended clinical use of the technology in the intended population and compare an effective and appropriate alternative at a comparable intensity. For some conditions, the alternative will be supportive care or surveillance. The quality and credibility of the evidence depend on study design and conduct, minimizing bias and confounding that can generate incorrect findings. The randomized controlled trial (RCT) is preferred to assess efficacy; however, in some circumstances, nonrandomized studies may be adequate. Randomized controlled trials are rarely large enough or long enough to capture less common adverse events and long-term effects. Other types of studies can be used for these purposes and to assess generalizability to broader clinical populations and settings of clinical practice.

Population Reference No. 1

Acute Migraine due to Episodic or Chronic Migraine

Clinical Context and Therapy Purpose

The purpose of remote electrical neuromodulation (REN) in individuals who have acute migraine attacks due to episodic or chronic migraine is to provide a treatment option that is an alternative to or an improvement on existing therapies.

The following PICO was used to select literature to inform this review.

Populations

The relevant population of interest is individuals with acute migraine due to episodic or chronic migraine.

Interventions

The therapy being considered is REN with the Nerivio device.

Comparators

The following therapies are currently being used to treat acute migraine due to episodic or chronic migraine: medical management or no treatment. A number of medications are used to treat migraine. First-line therapy for mild or moderate migraine includes oral non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or acetaminophen. More severe migraine can be treated through the use of triptans or an NSAID-triptan combination through a variety of routes (e.g. oral, nasal spray or powder, subcutaneous). Antiemetics can be added for migraine accompanied by nausea or vomiting. Other pharmacologic interventions used to treat acute migraine include calcitonin-gene related peptide antagonists, which can be used in patients with an insufficient response or contraindications to triptans, lasmiditan, and dihydroergotamine. Pharmacologic therapies have not been extensively studied in adolescent and pediatric populations. Options in this population have typically focused on use of ibuprofen, acetaminophen, and select triptans.

Outcomes

The general outcomes of interest are: symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, and treatment-related morbidity. Specific important health outcomes include freedom from migraine pain and bothersome symptoms, restored function (e.g. return to normal activities), and patient-assessed global impression of treatment. Examples of relevant outcome measures appear in Table 1. In adolescent and pediatric populations, functional disability can also be captured as changes in missed days of school.

Follow-up over several hours is needed to monitor for treatment effects.

Table 1. Health Outcome Measures Relevant to Acute Migraine Attack3,15,16,
Outcome Description
Pain free No pain at defined assessment time (e.g. 2 hours)
Pain relief Improvement of pain from moderate to severe at baseline to mild or none or pain scale improved at least 50% from baseline at defined assessment time (e.g. 2 hours)
Sustained pain free No pain at initial assessment (e.g. 2 hours) and remains at follow-up assessment (e.g. 1 day) with no use of rescue medication or relapse (recurrence) within that time frame
Sustained pain relief Improvement of pain from moderate to severe at baseline to mild or none or pain scale improved at least 50% from baseline at defined assessment time (e.g. 2 hours) and remains improved at follow-up assessment (e.g. 1 day) with no use of rescue medication or relapse (recurrence) within that time frame
Symptom relief Improvement of most bothersome symptom(s) from moderate to severe at baseline to mild or none at defined assessment time (e.g. 2 hours)
Function relief Improvement of function from moderate to severe at baseline to mild or none at defined assessment time (e.g. 2 hours)
Restored function No restriction to perform work or usual activities at a defined assessment time (e.g. 2 hours)
Global impact of treatment Patient assessment of functional disability and health-related quality of life using a Likert or other validated scale at a defined assessment time (e.g. 2 hours)
Global evaluation of treatment Patient assessment of overall treatment effect (pain, symptom relief, adverse events) using a Likert or other validated scale at a defined assessment time (e.g. 2 hours)

Study Selection Criteria

Methodologically credible studies were selected using the following principles:

Review of Evidence

Randomized Controlled Trials

Use of REN for the treatment of migraine has been assessed in 2 RCTs (Yarnitsky et al, 201717, and 2019 18,) comparing an active REN device (Nerivio Migra) with a sham device in patients with an acute migraine attack due to episodic migraine (Table 2).

A pilot, crossover trial conducted by Yarnitsky et al (2017) included data from 71 (of 86 randomized) patients who received active or sham REN.17, All patients were given an identical REN device that was preprogrammed to deliver in random order 4 active treatment sessions ranging from 80 to 120 hertz (Hz), corresponding to pulse widths of 50 to 200 millseconds, and 1 sham session of 0.1 hertz (45 millsecond pulse width). Both active and sham treatments were programmed for a duration of 20 minutes each. Most patients were women (80%) in their mid-40s (mean age: 46 years), with a mean of 5 migraine attacks per month with a mean pain intensity of 8.8, corresponding to severe pain. Race and/or ethnicity were not reported. In the trial, treatment with active REN was more frequently associated with reduction in, and freedom from, migraine pain than sham REN at 2-hour follow-up (Table 3). When the device was programmed to deliver an active treatment session, it was most effective at reducing pain when used within 20 minutes of migraine onset. Treatment response to active REN diminished over time of initiation following migraine onset, and no active REN participants reported complete pain relief if the device was initiated more than 1 hour from onset. No adverse events were reported, though patients were more likely to rate their treatment perception of the active REN sessions as painful (11%) or unpleasant (28%) compared with sham REN sessions (1% painful; 13% unpleasant). Other outcomes were not reported in this study. Study limitations appear in Tables 4 and 5.

A second, larger (N=252) RCT was conducted by Yarnitsky et al in 2019 (Table 2).18, The mean age of study participants was 43 years, 81% were female. Most participants were of White race (88%); 7% were Black and less than 1% were Asian. Time since migraine diagnosis was not reported; participants experienced a mean of 7 migraine days per month. Seventy-one percent of participants managed migraines with the use of acute medication, but important details about type and dosage were not provided. At baseline, 50% of participants reported that light sensitivity was their most bothersome symptom apart from migraine pain, followed by nausea (27%) and sound sensitivity (19%). After a 2 to 4-week run-in during which study participants kept a headache diary, participants were randomized to 4 to 6 weeks of at-home active or sham REN. The frequency was 100 to 120 Hz for the active device and less than 0.1 Hz for the sham device. The pulse width was 400 microseconds for the active device, and ranged from 40 to 550 microseconds for the sham device, with the intent of mimicking a similar sensation as that delivered by the active device. At the time of randomization, participants were instructed on how to determine their optimal REN intensity, but this was unclearly defined as a threshold that was "perceptible not painful" (e.g., no specific measure of intensity was described) and no data on the actual intensities used during the study were reported. Participants were instructed to treat their migraine with the REN device as soon as possible following migraine onset, and no later than within 1 hour of onset. Participants who initiated device use more than 1 hour following onset were excluded from the outcome analyses. Study results are summarized in Table 3. Patients treated with active REN were more likely to report freedom from pain and pain relief at 2-hour follow-up, and sustained freedom from pain and pain relief at 48-hour follow-up compared with the sham REN group. There was no statistical between-group difference in the proportions of patients reporting freedom from their most bothersome symptom (MBS) at 2-hour follow-up, but a greater proportion of active REN patients reported MBS relief at 2 hours relative to sham REN. Device-related adverse events were reported in 5% of active REN and 2% of sham REN participants (p=.49). At the conclusion of the study, participants were asked whether they believed they had received active or sham treatment as a measure of blinding. Half as many active participants correctly identified their device as did sham participants (23% in the active group vs. 50% in the sham group), although statistical analyses determined the treatment outcome differences between groups were not affected by participants perceived treatment group.

Relevance and methodological limitations of the study are detailed in Tables 4 and 5. Several critical limitations were identified, primarily related to study design and conduct. The most significant limitations pertain to the 1) selection and measurement of outcomes and 2) imbalances in baseline characteristics that are potentially important confounders and 3) absence of statistical adjustments to account for these confounders. These limitations are detailed next.

Outcome Selection and Assessment

Contemporary best practices in migraine research emphasize the importance of aligning study endpoints with outcomes that matter most to patients- complete resolution of pain and most bothersome migraine-associated symptom (MBS). 19, Instead, Yarnitsky et al. (2019) measured pain relief as the primary endpoint relegating pain-free status and freedom from MBS to secondary outcomes. Pain-free status, which reflects total resolution of pain, is more consistent with patient expectations and real-world therapeutic goals. In contrast, pain relief is a subjective measure that may not fully restore functional capacity. Similarly, while MBS relief targets the symptom most disruptive to quality of life, its clinical relevance is diminished if it does not translate into improved daily functioning.

Migraine trials typically focus on individuals with moderate to severe pain as it reflects the typical clinical presentation. Only 10% of participants reported severe pain, and 51% reported moderate pain at baseline. Remaining 39% of patients reported mild pain at the baseline. Further, the primary outcome was a composite of improvement from severe/moderate pain to mild/ none, or improvement from mild pain to none. It is unclear whether the observed pain relief in 67% (66 of 99) of treated patients was primarily driven by clinically meaningful improvement (i.e. severe/moderate pain to mild/none), or merely resolution of mild pain to none. It is important to recognize that only 7 patients with severe pain at baseline were treated with Nerivio.

To assess precision, we calculated 95% confidence intervals for two key outcomes: pain-free status and MBS relief at two hours. In the treatment group, 37.4% of participants were pain-free (95% CI: 27.8-46.9), compared to 18.4% in the sham group (95% CI: 10.9-25.9). Although the 19% between group difference was statistically significant, the wide confidence interval (7% to 30%) indicates substantial uncertainty. No significant effect was observed for MBS resolution.

Imbalances in Baseline Characteristics

A second major limitation was the lack of stratified randomization for potentially important confounders that could influence treatment response, including duration of migraine, response to triptans, and current use of preventive medication. Despite randomization, the treatment and sham groups differed in triptan use (52% vs. 44%) and preventive medication use (29% vs. 37%). Migraine duration was not reported. Additionally, there were intra-group differences in baseline pain severity: mild (35% vs. 42%), moderate (58% vs. 45%), and severe (7% vs. 14%) in the treatment and sham groups, respectively.

Lack of Adjusted Analysis

Despite these imbalances, the study did not include adjusted analyses to control for key covariates such as triptan response (responder, insufficient responder, or naive), preventive medication use, or baseline headache severity. This omission limits the interpretability of the findings and raises concerns about residual confounding.

Conclusion

In the light of these major limitations, the results of Yarnitsky et al. (2019) cannot be interpreted at face value due to the potential for confounding. An adequately powered randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial is necessary to clearly ascertain the net health outcome for Nerivio in treatment of acute migraine in individuals with moderate to severe headache.

A post-hoc analysis of the Yarnitsky 2019 RCT retrospectively compared the effectiveness of acute migraine treatment with the Nerivio device with usual care (i.e., pharmacologic acute migraine management) used during the 2- to 4-week run-in phase of the trial.20, Pharmacologic treatment used during the run-in phase consisted of NSAIDs, acetaminophen (alone, or in combination with aspirin and caffeine) or triptans. In analysis of a subset of 99 trial participants, the rate of freedom from pain was similar for Nerivio (37.4% [37/99]) and usual care (26.3% [26/99]; p=.099) at 2-hour follow-up. Results were similar for achievement of pain relief (66.7% [66/99] vs. 52.5% [52/99]; p=.034). Randomized controlled trials directly comparing REN with pharmacologic management are needed to confirm these pain findings and to compare the effect of REN versus pharmacologic management on other outcomes.

Table 2. Summary of Key RCT Characteristics
Study Countries Sites Dates Participants Interventions
          Active Comparator
Yarnitsky et al (2017)17, Israel 1 2016-2016 Adults (18 to 75 years) with ICHD-3 migraine 2 to 8 days/month with no preventive medication use 2 months prior to enrollment n=86
Active REN device; 4/5 preprogrammed treatment sessions
NA; crossover trial
Sham REN device; 1/5 preprogrammed treatment sessions
Yarnitsky et al (2019)18, US, Israel 12 2017-2018 Adults (18 to 75 years) with ICHD-3 migraine 2 to 8 days/month but <12 days/month, with no or stable preventive medication use 2 months prior to enrollment n=126
Active REN (Nerivio) device
n=126
Sham REN device
 
  ICHD: International Classification of Headache Disorders; NA: not applicable; RCT: randomized controlled trial; REN: remote electrical neuromodulation.  
Table 3. Summary of Key RCT Results
Study Pain Free1, 2 hours Pain Relief2, 2 hours Sustained Pain Free, 48 hours Sustained Pain Relief, 48 hours MBS Free, 2 hours MBS Relief3, 2 hours
Yarnitsky et al (2017)17,            
Active REN 44.1% (19/43) 76.7% (33/43) NR NR NR NR
Sham REN 5.9% (1/17) 23.5% (4/17) NR NR NR NR
p value .005 .005 NR NR NR NR
Yarnitsky et al (2019)18,            
Active REN 37.4% (37/99) 66.7% (66/99) 20.7% (18/87) 39.1% (34/87) 40.7% (33/81) 46.3% (44/95)
Sham REN 18.4% (19/103) 38.8% (40/103) 7.9% (7/89) 16.9% (15/89) 36.4% (32/88) 22.2% (22/99)
p value .003 <.001 .014 .001 .55 .001
MBS: most bothersome symptom; NR: not reported; RCT: randomized controlled trial; REN: remote electrical neuromodulation.
1 Change in headache severity from mild, moderate, or severe at baseline, to none.
2 Change in headache severity from moderate, or severe at baseline, to none or mild, or a reduction in headache severity from mild to none.
3 Subjective (undefined) relief of most bothersome symptom.

Table 4. Study Relevance Limitations

Study Populationa Interventionb Comparatorc Outcomesd Duration of Follow-upe
Yarnitsky et al (2017)17, 1, 2
Time since migraine diagnosis and details about current migraine management regimen not reported
4
Predicate device not commercially marketed
2
Comparison versus an acute treatment with established efficacy would be preferred
1, 5
Functional and quality of life outcome measures not addressed
 
Yarnitsky et al (2019)18, 1, 2
Time since migraine diagnosis and details about current migraine management regimen not reported
1, 5
Details about the mean timing of device initiation and mean, recommended or optimal device intensity (in mA) were not reported; a clinically relevant device intensity threshold has not been established; mean duration of treatments not reported
1, 2
Details and subgroup analysis on the effect of preventive medication use in 29% of active and 37% of sham participants were not completely reported; comparison versus an acute treatment with established efficacy would be preferred
1, 5
Functional and quality of life outcome measures not addressed
 
 
mA: milliamperes.
The study limitations stated in this table are those notable in the current review; this is not a comprehensive gaps assessment.
a Population key: 1. Intended use population unclear; 2. Study population is unclear; 3. Study population not representative of intended use; 4, Enrolled populations do not reflect relevant diversity; 5. Other.
b Intervention key: 1. Not clearly defined; 2. Version used unclear; 3. Delivery not similar intensity as comparator; 4. Not the intervention of interest (e.g., proposed as an adjunct but not tested as such); 5: Other.
c Comparator key: 1. Not clearly defined; 2. Not standard or optimal; 3. Delivery not similar intensity as intervention; 4. Not delivered effectively; 5. Other.
d Outcomes key: 1. Key health outcomes not addressed; 2. Physiologic measures, not validated surrogates; 3. Incomplete reporting of harms; 4. Not establish and validated measurements; 5. Clinically significant difference not prespecified; 6. Clinically significant difference not supported; 7. Other.
e Follow-Up key: 1. Not sufficient duration for benefit; 2. Not sufficient duration for harms; 3. Other.
Table 5. Study Design and Conduct Limitations
Study Allocationa Blindingb Selective Reportingc Data Completenessd Powere Statisticalf
Yarnitsky et al (2017)17, 3
Method of allocation to active or sham treatment session not reported
    1
No data reported for 17% (15/86) of enrolled participants
 
1
This was a pilot study; no sample size rationale or power calculations were reported
 
Yarnitsky et al (2019)18,10,   4
23% of REN vs. 50% of sham participants correctly identified their treatment allocation; however, ad-hoc statistical analyses determined between-group treatment differences were not affected by perceived treatment group
  1
19% (49/252) of randomized participants not accounted for in analysis described as modified-ITT

 
   
The study limitations stated in this table are those notable in the current review; this is not a comprehensive gaps assessment.
a Allocation key: 1. Participants not randomly allocated; 2. Allocation not concealed; 3. Allocation concealment unclear; 4. Inadequate control for selection bias; 5. Other.
b Blinding key: 1. Participants or study staff not blinded; 2. Outcome assessors not blinded; 3. Outcome assessed by treating physician; 4. Other.
c Selective Reporting key: 1. Not registered; 2. Evidence of selective reporting; 3. Evidence of selective publication; 4. Other.
d Data Completeness key: 1. High loss to follow-up or missing data; 2. Inadequate handling of missing data; 3. High number of crossovers; 4. Inadequate handling of crossovers; 5. Inappropriate exclusions; 6. Not intent to treat analysis (per protocol for noninferiority trials); 7. Other.
e Power key: 1. Power calculations not reported; 2. Power not calculated for primary outcome; 3. Power not based on clinically important difference; 4. Other.
f Statistical key: 1. Analysis is not appropriate for outcome type: (a) continuous; (b) binary; (c) time to event; 2. Analysis is not appropriate for multiple observations per patient; 3. Confidence intervals and/or p values not reported; 4. Comparative treatment effects not calculated; 5. Other.

Avoiding medication overuse has been postulated as a potential benefit of REN treatment of acute migraine. Marmura et al (2020)21, reported the results of an observational 8-week open-label extension study following the double-blind phase of the Yarnitsky 2019 trial. The Marmura study compared within-subject data (N=117) from the trial run-in phase with data from the open-label phase, finding that a higher proportion of patients avoided medication use during the open-label phase (when the REN device was available for use; 89.7%) than in the run-in phase (when the REN device was not available for use; 15.4%). Although these results suggest that use of the REN device could result in less medication use and therefore reduce the risk of medication overuse, confirmatory studies designed to directly assess the role of REN in populations at risk of medication overuse are needed.

Nonrandomized Studies

Numerous nonrandomized, uncontrolled studies have been conducted examining the effectiveness of REN with the Nerivio device for acute migraine.22,23,24,25,26,27,28, The most relevant studies are discussed below.

Three single-arm, open-label clinical trials of the Nerivio device were used to inform US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for use in patients other than those with acute migraine due to episodic migraine (Table 6). This includes 2 studies27,25, in patients with chronic migraine and 1 study24, in adolescents. In the 2 studies25,27, of patients with chronic migraine, the mean age was 42 and 44 years, and was 15 years in the study of adolescents.24, In all 3 studies most participants were female (60% to 83%) and of White race (86% to 100%). In the study by Hershey et al (2021)24, conducted in adolescents, patients with episodic and chronic migraine were eligible for study inclusion. The studies reported on the effectiveness of the Nerivio device for acute migraine at 2 and 24 hours; study results are summarized in Table 7. The Nerivio device was associated with improvements in pain, symptoms, and function in all 3 studies. Adverse events related to the Nerivio device occurred in 1.0% to 2.0% of study participants across the 3 studies; no serious adverse events were reported in any of the studies. Results from these studies are limited due to their open-label study design, lack of control groups, and variable follow-up.

Table 6. Summary of Key Nonrandomized Clinical Trial Characteristics
Study Country Dates Participants Treatment Follow-Up
Nierenburg et al 202025, US, Israel 2019-2020 N=42 adults (18 to 75 years) with ICHD-3 chronic migraine REN (Nerivio) 24 hours
Grosberg et al 202127, US 2019-2020 N=126 adults (18 to 75 years) with ICHD-3 chronic migraine REN (Nerivio) 24 hours
Hershey et al 202124, US 2019-2020 N=45 adolescents (12 to 17 years) with ICHD-3 migraine ≥3 attacks/month REN (Nerivio) 24 hours
ICHD: International Classification of Headache Disorders; REN: remote electrical neuromodulation.
 
Table 7. Summary of Key Nonrandomized Clinical Trial Results
Study Pain Free, 2 hours Pain Relief, 2 hours Sustained Pain Free, 24 hours Sustained Pain Relief, 24 hours Symptom free, 2 hours Functional improvement, 2 hours Return to normal function, 2 hours
Nierenburg et al 202025, N=38 N=38 N=20 N=32 N=31 N=35 N=35
Proportion (n/N) 26.3% (10/38)1 73.7% (28/38)1 45.0% (9/20)1 84.4% (27/32)1 Nausea/vomiting: 58.3% (14/24)

Photophobia: 35.5% (11/31)

Phonophobia: 40.0% (10/25)
45.7% (16/35) 28.6% (10/35)
Grosberg et al 202127, N=99 N=99 NR N=54 N=82 N=40 NR
Proportion (n/N) 19.2% (19/99)2 54.5% (54/99)3 NR 53.7% (29/54) Nausea/vomiting: 40.8% (20/49)

Photophobia: 36.6% (30/82)

Phonophobia: 39.7% (129/73)
47.5% (19/40) NR
Hershey et al 202124, N=39 N=39 N=11 N=22 N=31 N=33 NR
Proportion (n/N) 35.9% (14/39)2 71.8% (28/39)3 90.9% (10/11) 90.9% (20/22) Nausea/vomiting: 54.5% (12/22)

Photophobia: 41.9% (13/31)

Phonophobia: 40.0% (10/25)
69.7% (23/33) NR
NR: not reported.
1 Pain free and pain relief for at least 50% of treated attacks.
2 Change in headache severity from mild, moderate, or severe at baseline to none.
3 Change in headache severity from moderate or severe at baseline to none or mild; or a reduction in headache severity from mild to none.

A post-hoc analysis of the Hershey et al (2021) study, conducted in adolescents, compared the effect of Nerivio use (during the study phase) versus medication use (during the run-in phase) based on within-subject data.23, Thirty-five adolescents who used medication during the 4-week run-in phase and who had Nerivio use data from the study phase were included in the post-hoc analysis. Nerivio users were more likely to report freedom from pain than medication users (p=.004) but there was no difference between Nerivio and medication in the proportions of patients who achieved pain relief (p=.225). Studies designed to directly compare the Nerivio device with medication are needed to adequately assess comparative effectiveness.

A real-world study (Ailani et al, 2021) sponsored by the Nerivio manufacturer collected data from 23,151 treatments from 5,805 Nerivio users between October 2019 and May 2021.22, This study is unique in including data on use of the Nerivio device as monotherapy and in combination with medications. Nerivio users reported use of medications (over-the counter, triptans, or other medications) in addition to the Nerivio device for about one-third of the treatment sessions. For use of Nerivio as monotherapy at 2-hour follow-up, the proportion of patients with freedom from pain, pain relief, return to normal function, and functional disability improvement was 20.3%, 55.6%, 24.9%, and 51.2%, respectively. When the Nerivio device was used in conjunction with medication, proportions ranged from 10.1% to 15.5% for freedom from pain, 38.5% to 51.3% for pain relief, 11.0% to 19.7% for return to normal function, and 39.8% to 49.6% for functional disability improvement, depending on the drug class used. While these results suggest that REN with the Nerivio device is efficacious in a highly selected group of individuals, additional evidence from well-designed RCTs is needed to thoroughly assess comparative effectiveness.

Pediatric Experience

The FDA 510(k) summary for the 2024 expanded approval of acute use of Nerivio in pediatric patients (ages 8-11) was based on a retrospective real-world analysis of 293 children, aged 6-11 at their first use of the device.14, Median patient age was 11 (73.7% female). Safety data were primarily collected via self-reported customer service complaints, which indicated no adverse events. Effectiveness was assessed in patients who completed voluntary pre- and post-treatment surveys. Available efficacy data was only available in 18 participants, of which consistent headache relief was reported by 72.2% (13/18), consistent freedom from headache by 83.3% (15/18), and consistent functional disability freedom by 38.9% (7/18). Additional controlled studies are required to confirm efficacy in this population.Patients in this population used REN as a standalone treatment, with over-the-counter medications, and with prescribed headache medications, in 45.4%, 34.4%, and 20.9% of treatments, respectively.29,

In 2024, Hershey et al published the results of a survey of 332 students aged 7-17 (80.4% female).30, After being prescribed REN, the percentage of students reporting having their headaches treated at school increased by 11.5%. The most common reasons given for preferring REN treatment at school are the ability to avoid going to the nurse's office (42.5%) and the ability to treat discreetly (39.2%). Barriers to treatment included concerns about standing out (42.2%), and permission to use a smartphone in class to control the REN device (22.9%).

Coverage with Evidence Development Study

In 2025, Synowiec and coworkers published the outcomes of a real-world postmarketing coverage with evidence development study conducted in partnership with Highmark Inc.31, Members aged 12-75 years who were diagnosed with migraine were prescribed REN. Eligibility criteria included: (1) at least 1 standard-of-care acute migraine therapy had failed for 1 or more of the following reasons: contraindication, lack of sufficient efficacy, or intolerability of adverse effects; (2) were at risk of drug-drug interaction with other medications; (3) were a pregnant woman, woman trying to conceive, or breastfeeding woman; (4) had chronic migraine and were at risk of or diagnosed with medication overuse headache (MOH); or (5) were younger than 18 years. Efficacy was assessed by changed in Migraine Disability Assessment (MIDAS) score from baseline to 3 months of treatment and by prospective pain and disability reports 2 hours post treatment. Device utilization was assessed through prescription fulfillment rates. A total of 381 patients (mean age, 40.5; 91.1% female) participated in the study. Change in MIDAS score was calculated for all participants who answered the questionnaire twice (n=116), indicating a statistically and clinically meaningful improvement of -12.1 point (p =.014). Pain relief, pain freedom, functional disability relief, and functional disability freedom were reported in 77.8%, 33.3%, 70.6%, and 50.0% of participants, respectively Three minor adverse events were reported and patients used a mean of 4.0 (SD, 3.1) devices annually. Generalizability of outcomes is limited due to lack of a control group and high degree of missing data (70%).

Section Summary: Acute Migraine due to Episodic or Chronic Migraine

Evidence from 2 small RCTs found REN with the Nerivio device was more effective than a sham device for measures of pain and symptom relief at 2-hours post-treatment. Patients treated with the Nerivio device were also more likely than those treated with a sham device to report 48-hour freedom from pain and pain relief based on 1 RCT. No significant between-group difference in functional disability or quality of life was noted in a post-hoc analysis of the pivotal RCT. The remaining evidence from post-hoc and nonrandomized studies suggests that REN with the Nerivio device may provide improvements in acute pain and symptomatology. Controlled studies in adolescent and pediatric populations are lacking.

For individuals with acute migraine due to episodic or chronic migraine who receive remote electrical neuromodulation (REN), the evidence includes 2 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and nonrandomized, uncontrolled studies. Relevant outcomes are symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, and treatment-related morbidity. Use of an active REN device resulted in more patients with improved pain and symptoms at 2-hour follow-up compared with a sham device based on 2 RCTs (N=212) with numerous relevance limitations. Based on the existing evidence, it is unclear how Nerivio would fit into the current acute migraine management pathway. No significant between-group difference in functional disability or quality of life was noted in a post-hoc analysis of the pivotal RCT. Additionally, controlled studies in adolescent and pediatric populations are lacking. The evidence is insufficient to determine that the technology results in an improvement in the net health outcome.

Population 

Reference No. 1

Policy Statement

[ ] Medically Necessary 

[X] Investigational

Population Reference No. 2 - 4

Prevention of Migraine

Clinical Context and Therapy Purpose

The purpose of REN as preventive therapy in individuals who have acute migraine attacks due to episodic or chronic migraine is to provide a treatment option that is an alternative to or an improvement on existing therapies.

The following PICO was used to select literature to inform this review.

Populations

The relevant population of interest is individuals who may benefit from preventive migraine therapy, including those with frequent or long-lasting episodic or chronic migraines, migraine attacks that diminish quality of life or cause significant disability despite acute treatment, contraindications to or failure of acute therapies, and risk of medication overuse headache.

Interventions

The therapy being considered is REN with the Nerivio device.

Comparators

The following therapies are currently being used to prevent acute migraine due to episodic or chronic migraine: medical management or no treatment. A number of medications are used as prevention for migraine. For most adults with episodic migraines who may benefit from preventive therapy, initial therapy with an antiepileptic drug (divalproex sodium, sodium valproate, topiramate) or beta-blockers (metoprolol, propranolol, timolol) is recommended. Frovatriptan may be beneficial as initial therapy for prevention of menstrually associated migraine. Antidepressants (amitriptyline, venlafaxine), alternative beta-blockers (atenolol, nadolol), and additional triptans (naratriptan, zolmitriptan for menstrually associated migraine prevention) may be considered if initial therapy is unsuccessful. For preventive treatment of pediatric migraine, many children and adolescents who received placebo in clinical trials improved and most preventive medications were not superior to placebo. Possibly effective preventive treatment options for children and adolescents may include amitriptyline, topiramate, or propranolol. Non-pharmacologic interventions may include behavioral interventions and lifestyle changes focused on the avoidance of known migraine triggers.

Outcomes

The general outcomes of interest are: symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, and treatment-related morbidity. Specific important health outcomes include reduction of future attack frequency, severity, and duration, improved responsiveness to acute treatments, improved function and reduced disability, and prevention of progression of episodic migraine to chronic migraine. In adolescent and pediatric populations, functional disability can also be captured as changes in missed days of school.

Follow-up over several days to months is needed to monitor for preventive treatment effects.

Study Selection Criteria

Methodologically credible studies were selected using the following principles:

Review of Evidence

Randomized Controlled Trials

Use of REN for the prevention of migraine has been assessed in 1 double-blind, multicenter RCT by Tepper et al (2023), comparing an active REN device (Nerivio) used every other day with a sham device in adult patients with at least a 6-month history of headaches that meet the International Classification of Headache Disorders, third edition (ICHD-3) and 6 to 24 headache days per 28-day period in the past 3 months.32, Included participants either did not use preventive medicine or were on a stable dose of a single migraine preventive medication during the 2 months before enrollment and throughout the study. Prior to initiation of REN, all patients participated in a 4-week baseline phase, where they were instructed to continue their regular medications when needed, and document daily reports, regardless of if they had a headache that day or not, to rate symptoms using a 4-point scale. Symptoms that were collected included pain, functional disability, presence or absence of nausea and/or vomiting, photophobia, and phonophobia, and acute medication usage.

To be eligible for the intervention phase, individuals had to have had 6 to 24 headache days during the 28-day baseline period, with at least 4 headache days fulfilling ICHD-3 criteria for migraine, and had at least 80% compliance on completing their daily record of symptoms. The intervention phase was 8 weeks long and included participants were randomized 1:1 to active REN or sham REN. The active and sham devices were visually identical, so staff and participants were blinded to their randomized group. Participants were directed to complete a full 45-minute treatment with REN every other day and to complete a daily diary. If acute treatment was needed, participants were instructed to use their usual acute treatments. The primary outcome was the mean change in number of migraine days per month in the 4-week baseline phase compared to the last 4 weeks of treatment phase (weeks 9 through 12). Overall, patients treated with the active REN device had statistically significantly fewer migraine days during the intervention period compared to baseline compared to those treated with sham. This was also demonstrated in subanalyses based on episodic or chronic migraines. Of the participants, 40.8% used a preventive medication in combination with REN. Half of the medication users were on first-line preventive medications (e.g., amitriptyline, topiramate), while the other half were on second line agents (e.g., anti-calcitonin gene-related peptide monoclonal antibodies, onabotulinumtoxin A, gepants). There were 2 non-device-related serious adverse events both in the REN arm. There was a single device-related adverse event in the sham group and no device-related adverse events in the active group. There were no differences in quality of life questionnaires or Headache Impact Tests, a tool used to capture the impact of headache on functional health and well-being, between groups at any time period. These results are limited by the 8-week duration, shorter than the recommended 12-week duration by the International Headache Society guidelines for neuromodulation devices and lack of medical history reporting previous preventive medications used by participants. Tables 8 and 9 describe the key characteristics and results of the RCT. No significant difference between REN and sham groups was noted for mean change in the Headache Impact Test Short Form (HIT-6) or Migraine Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire - Function Domain (MSQ). Tables 10 and 11 describe notable limitations.

Table 8. Summary of Key RCT Characteristics
Study Countries Sites Dates Participants Interventions
          Active Comparator
Tepper et al (2023)32, US 15 2021-2022 Adults (18 to 75 years) with ICHD-3 migraine at least 4 days/month in baseline period with no preventive medication use or stable medication use 2 months prior to enrollment; 85% female, mean age of 41.7 years; and ratio of episodic to chronic patients was 47.6%: 52.4%. n=128 (ITT); 95 (mITT)
Active REN device, use every other day
n=120 (ITT); 84 (mITT)
Sham REN device
ICHD: International Classification of Headache Disorders; ITT: intention to treat; mITT: modified intention to treat; RCT: randomized controlled trial; REN: remote electrical neuromodulation.
 
Table 9. Summary of Key RCT Results
Study Overall mean change in migraine days/month1 Mean change in migraine days/month: Episodic subgroup1 Mean change in migraine days/month: Chronic subgroup1 Mean change in moderate/severe headache days Mean change in number of headache days Percentage of patients achieving at least 50% reduction from baseline in headache days
Tepper et al (2023)32,            
n n=95 active REN; n=84 sham REN n=45 active REN; n=42 sham REN n=50 active REN; n=42 sham REN n=95 active REN; n=84 sham REN n=95 active REN; n=84 sham REN n=95 active REN; n=84 sham REN
Active REN -4.0±4.0 -3.2±3.4 -4.7±4.4 -3.8±3.9 -4.5±4.1 26.3%
Sham REN -1.3±4.0 -1.0±3.6 -1.6±4.4 -2.2±3.6 -1.8±4.6 11.9%
Difference versus sham (95% CI); p value -2.7 (-3.9 to -1.5); <.001 2.3 (NR);.003 3.0 (NR);.001 -1.6 (-2.7 to -0.5);.005 -2.7 (-3.9 to -1.5); <.001 NR; NR;.015
CI: confidence interval; NR: not reported; RCT: randomized controlled trial; REN: remote electrical neuromodulation.
1 Change in migraine days from baseline (weeks 1 through 4) compared to last 4 weeks (weeks 9 through 12)

Table 10. Study Relevance Limitations

Study Populationa Interventionb Comparatorc Outcomesd Duration of Follow-upe
Tepper et al (2023)32, 1, 2
Intended use population is unclear (e.g., treatment naive, those with contraindications to medication, or those who have failed pharmacologic treatment); time since migraine diagnosis and details about current migraine management regimen and previously failed treatments not reported
1
A clinically relevant device intensity threshold has not been established
2
Comparison versus specific pharmacologic preventive treatments with established efficacy would be preferred if attempting to establish first-line use
  3. 8-week duration is less than the recommended 12-week duration by IHS guidelines for neuromodulation devices
IHS: International Headache Society.
The study limitations stated in this table are those notable in the current review; this is not a comprehensive gaps assessment.
a Population key: 1. Intended use population unclear; 2. Study population is unclear; 3. Study population not representative of intended use; 4, Enrolled populations do not reflect relevant diversity; 5. Other.
b Intervention key: 1. Not clearly defined; 2. Version used unclear; 3. Delivery not similar intensity as comparator; 4. Not the intervention of interest (e.g., proposed as an adjunct but not tested as such); 5: Other.
c Comparator key: 1. Not clearly defined; 2. Not standard or optimal; 3. Delivery not similar intensity as intervention; 4. Not delivered effectively; 5. Other.
d Outcomes key: 1. Key health outcomes not addressed; 2. Physiologic measures, not validated surrogates; 3. Incomplete reporting of harms; 4. Not establish and validated measurements; 5. Clinically significant difference not prespecified; 6. Clinically significant difference not supported; 7. Other.
e Follow-Up key: 1. Not sufficient duration for benefit; 2. Not sufficient duration for harms; 3. Other.
Table 11. Study Design and Conduct Limitations
Study Allocationa Blindingb Selective Reportingc Data Completenessd Powere Statisticalf
Tepper et al (2023)32,      

2
LOCF imputation methodology for full ITT set not prespecified and generally does not meet MCAR assumptions; worst case sensitivity analysis not reported; 28% of data missing in mITT analysis
 

   
ITT: intention to treat; LOCF: last observation carried forward; MCAR: missing completely at random; mITT: modified ITT.
The study limitations stated in this table are those notable in the current review; this is not a comprehensive gaps assessment.
a Allocation key: 1. Participants not randomly allocated; 2. Allocation not concealed; 3. Allocation concealment unclear; 4. Inadequate control for selection bias; 5. Other.
b Blinding key: 1. Participants or study staff not blinded; 2. Outcome assessors not blinded; 3. Outcome assessed by treating physician; 4. Other.
c Selective Reporting key: 1. Not registered; 2. Evidence of selective reporting; 3. Evidence of selective publication; 4. Other.
d Data Completeness key: 1. High loss to follow-up or missing data; 2. Inadequate handling of missing data; 3. High number of crossovers; 4. Inadequate handling of crossovers; 5. Inappropriate exclusions; 6. Not intent to treat analysis (per protocol for noninferiority trials); 7. Other.
e Power key: 1. Power calculations not reported; 2. Power not calculated for primary outcome; 3. Power not based on clinically important difference; 4. Other.
f Statistical key: 1. Analysis is not appropriate for outcome type: (a) continuous; (b) binary; (c) time to event; 2. Analysis is not appropriate for multiple observations per patient; 3. Confidence intervals and/or p values not reported; 4. Comparative treatment effects not calculated; 5. Other.

Nonrandomized Studies

Prospective, real-world data collected and analyzed by the manufacturer on the use of Nerivio in adolescents was summarized in the FDA approval packet for the indication of Nerivio in migraine prevention in adolescents and adults.13, The data were collected from adolescents who used the device for acute migraine treatment, but use was equivalent to the suggested preventive use (10 times per month or higher). Prospective data were collected through the Nerivio app between January 2021 and November 2022. Eligible adolescent patients used Nerivio on at least 10 days in their first 28-day month of using the device, and used the device on at least 3 days in each of the 2 subsequent months. The goal of analysis was to assess the mean reduction in migraine headache days from the first month of use to the second and third month of use. In total, 61 patients (mean age, 15.7±1.3 years, 87% female) were eligible for analysis. Investigators found significant month-to-month reduction in migraine headache days from 15 days (standard error [SE], 0.6) in month 1, to 10.6 days (SE, 0.8) in month 2 (p<.0001), and 8.7 days (SE, 0.7) in month 3 (p<.0001), demonstrating substantial reduction from baseline during months 2 and 3 of device use. This data is limited by a lack of comparator and no description of medications or alternative interventions patients were additionally using.

A prospective, real-world evidence analysis investigated whether the use of Nerivio in adolescents who have frequently utilized the REN wearble device had reduced mean monthly migraine treatment days (MMTD) compared to baseline.33, Patients (N=83) were 15.9 ± 1.3 years of age (mean±SD) and were evaluated for a 3 month period. There was a statistically significant monthly reduction in MMTD (a reduction of 3.6 [±4.8] MMTD) from the first month to the second month of consecutive use ( p<.001). In the third month of treatment, there was a further reduction of 1.6 (±4.1) MMTD ( p<.001), for a cumulative total reduction of 5.2 (±4.8) MMTD throughout the first 3 months of consecutive treatment.

The FDA 510(k) summary for the expanded approval of preventive use of Nerivio in pediatric patients (ages 8-11) was based on a retrospective real-world analysis of 293 children, aged 6-11.14, Preventive use of the device was assumed by analyzing patients whose frequency of use in month one was suggestive of preventative treatments. No specific data on proportion of patients in whom preventive use was assumed or efficacy outcomes in the assumed preventive use population were reported in the 510(k) summary. Well-defined, controlled studies are required to confirm benefit in this population.

Section Summary: Prevention of Migraine

Evidence from a small RCT found REN with the Nerivio device was more effective than a sham device for decreasing migraine days per month, regardless of episodic or chronic subgroup, when used every other day for 8 weeks. Patients treated with the Nerivio device were also more likely than those treated with sham to have reduced moderate to severe headache days, reduced headache days in general, and at least a 50% reduction from their baseline in overall headache days. Approximately half of patients included in this study were also taking preventive pharrmacologic therapy. There were no differences in quality of life or functional health patient-reported outcomes between groups at any time point. Prospective, observational data in 2 real world evidence studies using the device for acute treatment of migraine demonstrated a significant reduction in migraine headache days from baseline to months 2 and 3 with device use in adolescent patients. Based on the existing evidence, it is unclear how Nerivio would fit into the current migraine prevention pathway, although it could provide benefit for those who do not receive adequate benefit from pharmacologic first- or second-line therapies, or who may have a contraindication to pharmacologic therapies. Study limitations include a high-degree of missing data and choice of imputation method.Controlled data in pediatric populations is lacking.

For adult individuals who may benefit from preventive migraine therapy, including those with frequent or long-lasting episodic or chronic migraines, migraine attacks that diminish quality of life or cause significant disability despite acute treatment, contraindications to or failure of acute therapies, and risk of medication overuse headache, who receive REN, the evidence includes 1 RCT and 1 prospective, observational study. Relevant outcomes are symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, and treatment-related morbidity. Use of an active REN device resulted in more adults with decreased migraine days per month, regardless of episodic or chronic subtype, when used every other day for 8 weeks compared with a sham device based on 1 RCT (N=248). Prospective, observational data in 2 real world evidence studies using the device for acute treatment of migraine demonstrated a significant reduction in migraine headache days from baseline to months 2 and 3 with device use in adolescent patients. Based on the existing evidence, it is unclear how Nerivio would fit into the current migraine prevention pathway, although it could provide benefit for those who do not receive adequate benefit from pharmacologic first- or second-line therapies, or who may have a contraindication to pharmacologic therapies. The evidence is sufficient to determine that the technology results in an improvement in the net health outcome.

Population 

Reference No. 2, 3, & 4

Policy Statement

[X] Medically Necessary as per clinical input

[ ] Investigational

Supplemental Information

The purpose of the following information is to provide reference material. Inclusion does not imply endorsement or alignment with the evidence review conclusions.

 

Clinical Input From Physician Specialty Societies and Academic Medical Centers

 

While the various physician specialty societies and academic medical centers may collaborate with and make recommendations during this process, through the provision of appropriate reviewers, input received does not represent an endorsement or position statement by the physician specialty societies or academic medical centers, unless otherwise noted.

 

2025 Input

Clinical input was sought to help determine whether the use of remote electrical neuromodulation (i.e., Nerivio) for the listed populations would provide a clinically meaningful improvement in net health outcome and represents generally accepted medical practice:

In response to structured requests, clinical input was received from 4 respondents, including 1 physician-level respondent identified by the American Academy of Neurology (AAN), and 3 physician-level responses identified by various academic medical centers. In addition, an informal response was provided by the American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Neurology (AAP).

Clinical input supports this use provides a clinically meaningful benefit, with the majority of respondents supportive that its use is consistent with generally accepted medical practice. Respondents noted that all patients with migraine may benefit from a nonpharmacologic option for either stand-alone or adjunctive use, particularly among those who have failed other options, who have contraindications or an intolerance to alternatives, who are at risk for or have a history of medication overuse headache, or who are at risk of drug-drug interactions. While some clinicians trial acute treatment with REN first, failure in the abortive setting does not preclude success with preventive use. Additionally, clinicians support first-line use of REN for acute or preventive treatment, particularly in adolescent and pediatric populations where there are limited alternatives with evidence of efficacy or suitable side effect profiles. Respondents emphasize that the discreet nature of the REN device is ideal for use by chldren and adolescents in the school setting.

Practice Guidelines and Position Statements

Guidelines or position statements will be considered for inclusion in ‘Supplemental Information' if they were issued by, or jointly by, a US professional society, an international society with US representation, or National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). Priority will be given to guidelines that are informed by a systematic review, include strength of evidence ratings, and include a description of management of conflict of interest.

American Academy of Neurology/American Headache Society

A 2012 joint guideline by the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) and the American Headache Society (AHS) on pharmacologic treatment for episodic migraine prevention in adults was published prior to the approval of Nerivio in the US and did not address the use of remote electrical neuromodulation (REN) or other nonpharmacologic treatments.7, Similarly, 2019 joint guidelines issued by AAN and AHS on the treatment of acute migraine34, and prevention of migraine8, in children and adolescents did not address the use of REN or other nonpharmacologic treatments.

American Headache Society

In 2021, AHS issued guidance on the integration of new migraine treatments, including REN, into clinical practice.4, The AHS addressed the use of neuromodulatory devices as a group that included electrical trigeminal nerve stimulation, noninvasive vagus nerve stimulation, single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation, and REN; no guidance specific to REN use was issued.

The AHS determined that initiation of a neuromodulatory device is appropriate when all of the following criteria are met:

Department of Veterans Affairs/ Department of Defense

The U.S Department of Veterans Affairs/Department of Defense (VA/DoD) 2023 guidelines for the management of headache state that "there is insufficient evidence to recommend for or against any form of neuromodulation for the treatment and/or prevention of migraine"; examples of neuromodulation treatments mentioned include remote electrical neurostimulation. 35,

U.S. Preventive Services Task Force Recommendations

Not applicable.

Medicare National Coverage

There is no national coverage determination. In the absence of a national coverage determination, coverage decisions are left to the discretion of local Medicare carriers.

Ongoing and Unpublished Clinical Trials

Some currently ongoing trials that might influence this review are listed in Table 12.

Table 12. Summary of Key Trials
NCT No. Trial Name Planned Enrollment Completion Date
Unpublished      
NCT05940870a A Prospective, Open-label, Post-marketing Observational Study Assessing the Safety and Efficacy of Nerivio for Migraine Prevention in Real-world Environment 250 Aug 2024 (completed)
NCT: national clinical trial.
a Denotes industry-sponsored or cosponsored trial.

References

  1. VanderPluym JH, Halker Singh RB, Urtecho M, et al. Acute Treatments for Episodic Migraine in Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. JAMA. Jun 15 2021; 325(23): 2357-2369. PMID 34128998
  2. Burch R, Rizzoli P, Loder E. The prevalence and impact of migraine and severe headache in the United States: Updated age, sex, and socioeconomic-specific estimates from government health surveys. Headache. Jan 2021; 61(1): 60-68. PMID 33349955
  3. Singh RBH, VanderPluym JH, Morrow AS, et al. Acute Treatments for Episodic Migraine. Rockville (MD): Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (US); December 2020. Accessed August 9, 2025.
  4. Ailani J, Burch RC, Robbins MS. The American Headache Society Consensus Statement: Update on integrating new migraine treatments into clinical practice. Headache. Jul 2021; 61(7): 1021-1039. PMID 34160823
  5. Burch RC, Loder S, Loder E, et al. The prevalence and burden of migraine and severe headache in the United States: updated statistics from government health surveillance studies. Headache. Jan 2015; 55(1): 21-34. PMID 25600719
  6. Silberstein SD. Practice parameter: evidence-based guidelines for migraine headache (an evidence-based review) [RETIRED]: report of the Quality Standards Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology. Neurology. Sep 26 2000; 55(6): 754-62. PMID 10993991
  7. Silberstein SD, Holland S, Freitag F, et al. Evidence-based guideline update: pharmacologic treatment for episodic migraine prevention in adults: report of the Quality Standards Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology and the American Headache Society. Neurology. Apr 24 2012; 78(17): 1337-45. PMID 22529202
  8. Oskoui M, Pringsheim T, Billinghurst L, et al. Practice guideline update summary: Pharmacologic treatment for pediatric migraine prevention: Report of the Guideline Development, Dissemination, and Implementation Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology and the American Headache Society. Neurology. Sep 10 2019; 93(11): 500-509. PMID 31413170
  9. Nierenburg H, Stark-Inbar A. Nerivio ® remote electrical neuromodulation for acute treatment of chronic migraine. Pain Manag. Apr 2022; 12(3): 267-281. PMID 34538078
  10. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. De Novo Classification Request for Nerivio Migra. Accessed August 7, 2025.
  11. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 501(k) Summary: Theranica Bio-Electronics LTDs Nerivio. K203181. Accessed August 9, 2025.
  12. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 510(k) Summary: Nerivio Approval in Adolescents. K203181. Accessed August 8, 2025.
  13. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 510(k) Summary (K223169): Nerivio Approval for Preventative Treatment. Accessed August 5, 2025.
  14. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). 510(k) Summary. Theranica Bio-Electronics LTD.'s NerivioInfinity and Nerivio (K241756). October 8, 2024. https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/cdrh_docs/pdf24/K241756.pdf. Accessed August 18, 2025.
  15. Tassorelli C, Diener HC, Silberstein SD, et al. Guidelines of the International Headache Society for clinical trials with neuromodulation devices for the treatment of migraine. Cephalalgia. Oct 2021; 41(11-12): 1135-1151. PMID 33990161
  16. Diener HC, Tassorelli C, Dodick DW, et al. Guidelines of the International Headache Society for controlled trials of acute treatment of migraine attacks in adults: Fourth edition. Cephalalgia. May 2019; 39(6): 687-710. PMID 30806518
  17. Yarnitsky D, Volokh L, Ironi A, et al. Nonpainful remote electrical stimulation alleviates episodic migraine pain. Neurology. Mar 28 2017; 88(13): 1250-1255. PMID 28251920
  18. Yarnitsky D, Dodick DW, Grosberg BM, et al. Remote Electrical Neuromodulation (REN) Relieves Acute Migraine: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Multicenter Trial. Headache. Sep 2019; 59(8): 1240-1252. PMID 31074005
  19. Migraine: Developing Drugs for Acute Treatment Guidance for Industry. FDA (2018)
  20. Rapoport AM, Bonner JH, Lin T, et al. Remote electrical neuromodulation (REN) in the acute treatment of migraine: a comparison with usual care and acute migraine medications. J Headache Pain. Jul 22 2019; 20(1): 83. PMID 31331265
  21. Marmura MJ, Lin T, Harris D, et al. Incorporating Remote Electrical Neuromodulation (REN) Into Usual Care Reduces Acute Migraine Medication Use: An Open-Label Extension Study. Front Neurol. 2020; 11: 226. PMID 32318014
  22. Ailani J, Rabany L, Tamir S, et al. Real-World Analysis of Remote Electrical Neuromodulation (REN) for the Acute Treatment of Migraine. Front Pain Res (Lausanne). 2021; 2: 753736. PMID 35295483
  23. Hershey AD, Irwin S, Rabany L, et al. Comparison of Remote Electrical Neuromodulation and Standard-Care Medications for Acute Treatment of Migraine in Adolescents: A Post Hoc Analysis. Pain Med. Apr 08 2022; 23(4): 815-820. PMID 34185084
  24. Hershey AD, Lin T, Gruper Y, et al. Remote electrical neuromodulation for acute treatment of migraine in adolescents. Headache. Feb 2021; 61(2): 310-317. PMID 33349920
  25. Nierenburg H, Vieira JR, Lev N, et al. Remote Electrical Neuromodulation for the Acute Treatment of Migraine in Patients with Chronic Migraine: An Open-Label Pilot Study. Pain Ther. Dec 2020; 9(2): 531-543. PMID 32648205
  26. Tepper SJ, Lin T, Montal T, et al. Real-world Experience with Remote Electrical Neuromodulation in the Acute Treatment of Migraine. Pain Med. Dec 25 2020; 21(12): 3522-3529. PMID 32935848
  27. Grosberg B, Rabany L, Lin T, et al. Safety and efficacy of remote electrical neuromodulation for the acute treatment of chronic migraine: an open-label study. Pain Rep. 2021; 6(4): e966. PMID 34667919
  28. Nierenburg H, Rabany L, Lin T, et al. Remote Electrical Neuromodulation (REN) for the Acute Treatment of Menstrual Migraine: a Retrospective Survey Study of Effectiveness and Tolerability. Pain Ther. Dec 2021; 10(2): 1245-1253. PMID 34138449
  29. Werner K, Gerson T, Stark-Inbar, A, et al. Acute treatment of migraine in children aged 6-11: Real-world analysis of remote electrical neuromodulation (REN). Annals of the Child Neurology Society. May 21, 2024; 2(2): 135-145. https://doi.org/10.1002/cns3.20073.
  30. Hershey AD, Shmuely S, Stark-Inbar A, et al. Patterns, Barriers, and Preferences of Treating Migraine Within the School Setting: A Survey Study of Students. Children (Basel). Oct 25 2024; 11(11). PMID 39594861
  31. Synowiec A, Stark-Inbar A, Santamaria DD, et al. Coverage with evidence development study shows benefits in patients with migraine treated with remote electrical neuromodulation. Am J Manag Care. Apr 08 2025. PMID 40834199
  32. Tepper SJ, Rabany L, Cowan RP, et al. Remote electrical neuromodulation for migraine prevention: A double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial. Headache. Mar 2023; 63(3): 377-389. PMID 36704988
  33. Monteith TS, Stark-Inbar A, Shmuely S, et al. Remote electrical neuromodulation (REN) wearable device for adolescents with migraine: a real-world study of high-frequency abortive treatment suggests preventive effects. Front Pain Res (Lausanne). 2023; 4: 1247313. PMID 38028429
  34. Oskoui M, Pringsheim T, Holler-Managan Y, et al. Practice guideline update summary: Acute treatment of migraine in children and adolescents: Report of the Guideline Development, Dissemination, and Implementation Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology and the American Headache Society. Headache. Sep 2019; 59(8): 1158-1173. PMID 31529481
  35. Management of Headache Work Group. VA/DoD Clinical Practice Guideline.Washington, DC. September 2023. Accessed August 13, 2024. https://www.healthquality.va.gov/guidelines/pain/headache/VA-DoD-CPG-Headache-Full-CPG.pdf

Codes

Codes Number Description
CPT N/A  
HCPCS A4540 Distal transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulator, stimulates peripheral nerves of the upper arm
ICD10-CM F90.0- F90.9 Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder code range
  G25.0 Essential tremor
  G25.2 Other specified forms of tremor
  G25.3 Myoclonus
  G43.001-G43.919 Migraine code range
  R21.5 Tremor, unspecified
ICD10-PCS   ICD-10-PCS codes are only used for inpatient services. There is no specific ICD-10-PCS code for this procedure
POS Outpatient/Professional  
TOS DME  

Policy History

Date

Action

Description

11/05/2025

Annual Review

Policy updated with literature review through August 18, 2025; references added. Policy statement changed to medically necessary with criteria based on review of clinical input.

09/22/2025

Off cycle review

No changes. 

06/09/2025

Annual Review

No changes.

12/03/2024

Annual Review

Policy updated with literature review through August 9, 2024; references added. Policy statements unchanged.

06/06/2024

Preliminary Review

No changes. Statement remains unchanged. 

01/09/2024

Replace policy

Removed K1016-K1019 due to lack of relevance to this policy. Added A4540 and delete K1023.

11/15/2023

Replace policy

Policy updated with literature review through August 29, 2023; references added. Evidence review added for prevention of migraine based on recent expansion of FDA-approved indications. Remote electrical neuromodulation for acute migraine or prevention of migraine is considered investigational. new PICO added: With episodic or chronic migraines who may benefit from preventive treatment.  

06/09/2023

Annual review

Added back K1023

06/06/2022

Created

New policy. Policy created with literature review through March 22, 2022. Remote electrical neuromodulation for acute migraine is considered investigational.

Appendix

2025 Clinical Input

Clinical Input Objective

Clinical input is sought to help determine whether the use of remote electrical neuromodulation (i.e., Nerivio) for the listed populations would provide a clinically meaningful improvement in net health outcome and represents generally accepted medical practice:

In response to structured requests, clinical input was received from 4 respondents, including 1 physician-level respondent identified by the American Academy of Neurology (AAN), and 3 physician-level responses identified by various academic medical centers. In addition, an informal response was provided by the American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Neurology (AAP).

Respondent Profile

#

Respondent Clinical Specialty Board Certification

1

Raissa, Villaneuva, MD, MPH University of Rochester Medical Center Identified by the AAN Neurology, Headache Medicine Neurology, Headache Medicine

2

Trevor Gerson, MD Children’s Mercy, Kansas City Neurology, Headache Medicine Neurology, Headache Medicine

3

Crystal Jicha, MD University of California, Irvine Neurology Headache Medicine

4

Jack Gladstein, MD University of Maryland, School of Medicine Headache Pediatrics, Adolescent Medicine, Headache Medicine

5

American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Neurology  

 

Respondent Conflict of Interest Disclosure

#

1) Research support related to the topic where clinical input is being sought 2) Positions, paid or unpaid, related to the topic where clinical input is being sought 3) Reportable, more than $1,000, health care‒related assets or sources of income for myself, my spouse, or my dependent children related to the topic where clinical input is being sought 4) Reportable, more than $350, gifts or travel reimbursements for myself, my spouse, or my dependent children related to the topic where clinical input is being sought

YES/NO Explanation YES/NO Explanation YES/NO Explanation YES/NO Explanation

1

No   No   No   No  

2

No   Yes Headache specialist treating children and adolescents up to age 22 for headache diseases. Yes No ongoing sources of incone or assets. I have participated in an Advisory Boards for Theranica >1 year ago (multiple years after using and advocating for this device and the use of neuromodulation in general.) No  

3

No   No   No   No  

4

No   No   No   No  

5

NR   NR   NR   NR  

NR: No response.
Specialty Society respondents provided aggregate information that may be relevant to the group of clinicians who provided input to the Society-level response.

Clinical Input Ratings

Individuals, 12 years and older

Individuals, 8-11 years old

Clinical Input Responses

Question 1: We are seeking your rationale on whether using the Nerivio for acute migraine treatment in individuals who are 12 years and older with episodic or chronic migraine, with or without aura, provides a clinically meaningful improvement in net health outcome. Please respond based on the evidence and your clinical experience.

Please address these points in your response:

#

Rationale

1

The established medical management for this population for acute treaments is NSAIDs, triptans, gepants, lasmiditan, antiemetics or some combination of these. Nerivio can provide clinically meaningful improvement as acute treatment for patients especially those who have failed triptans and gepants, lasmiditan or for patients who have side effects to triptans. Some patients prefer nonmedication treatments for acute treatment and Nerivio can also be helpful in this population. Nerivio would be used as an acute treatment first and if beneficial, could be utilized for prevention if found beneficial for acute treatment. Nerivio may also supplement medications already being utilized as it has minimal side effects. It also can be more cost effective relative to gepants if its clinically effective for acute treatment.

 

2

Current guidelines support the use of NSAIDs, triptans, and antiemetics for acute treatment of migraine in this patient population. Notably, the American Headache Society Consensus on Integrating New Treatments (reference #2) also states that all patients with migraine should be offered neuromodulation.

In my practice, I offer all patients Nerivio as first-line treatment. Younger patients are still learning to identify the start of a migraine, and how to treat it at onset. I have seen the window of effectiveness with Nerivio be longer than with other pharmacological therapies (including treating a patient in status migrainosus with resolution of the headache). Also, patients and families frequently prefer a non-drug option to treat headaches when available. In my experience, this device is just as effective (if not more) than current alternative treatments (including triptans). Almost every patient who is offered the device chooses to trial it (unless restricted for financial reasons).

Another benefit is that this device can be used without restrictions to frequency or interval between treatments. For my patients who have frequent migraine attacks, this means that they have to try to identify if an attack will become severe or not, usually leading to a significant delay in any treatment. For Nerivio (and neuromodulation devices in general), they do not have to play this game, nor be anxious regarding “wasting” a treatment. This allows treatment of all headaches without the risk of medication-overuse concerns. For my patients with very-frequent or daily headaches, they can treat each one acutely (when I prescribe triptans and have to limit treatment, parents will remark “so for the other times I just let my kid suffer?”).

I do believe that acute treatment efficacy lends to the likelihood of efficacy of preventative treatment overall, but lack of response is not necessarily exclusionary (especially as the baseline headache frequency increases).

A positive response to Nerivio should be patient-driven. I will frankly ask the patients and families if the treatment is worthwhile overall. What I find is that even if the device only provides partial relief, the control that this gives to patients is meaningful as there are no significant risks or adverse effects.

 

Overall, the net health outcome is more reliable, easier, effective acute treatment. This leads to improvement in quality of life (where migraine disease in pediatric and adolescent patients confers similar levels of disability to cancer and autoimmune disease), decreased healthcare utilization (such as emergency department visits), and decreased need for preventative and other acute medications.

3

Medical management for this population includes first-line use of therapies such as NSAIDs for mild pain and migraine specific therapies such as triptans and CGRP antagonists for moderate to severe pain. Current guidelines outline that Nerivio may be considered as a treatment option in those with migraine although no clear definition has been established as to when it should be offered. In my clinical experience, Nerivio has a potential role in the treatment of any individual with migraine. Given its broad clearance, it can be used in any form of migraine. Given its very mild side effect profile, it is an appropriate choice for almost any individual. I recommend it to those under 18 as a first line option given its side effect profile and to those over 18 if they are not interested in medications or have contraindications to acute therapy options. For instance, many of my older patients have cardiovascular conditions in which the use of triptans and NSAIDs may be contraindicated. Pregnancy is another situation in which Nerivio may be considered first line. Nerivio is an important option in this scenario. It is an important adjunct treatment for those with migraine as well. As an acute therapy, it provides another option for treating attacks and therefore reduces the risk of medication overuse headache and limits the amount of acute therapy patients need to consume. Positive response to acute use can be assessed by headache reduction or freedom as well as reduction in most bothersome symptoms such as nausea. In my clinical experience, those who continue to use it are the ones who perceive benefit, often by the metrics listed above. I have had patients with episodic and chronic migraine find good effect. Some people respond better to this for acute use than prevention.

4

I am founder of the second headache clinic for children in the US stated in 1989. There have been few treatments that have worked as well, with fewer side effects as the Nerivio device. It offers both acute treatment during an attack and prophylactic treatment in between attacks without side effects. It provides self-efficacy for children and adolescents and gives them a sense of power over their pain. Established treatments include a combination of healthy habits, acute rescue and prevention treatments. These include medications, lifestyle changes, and at times neuromodulation devices. Nerivio can be first line treatment to be used alone or in combination with medications and lifestyle changes. Since there are no side effects there is no good reason NOT to use it. Reasons to use Nerivio as first line are for children with anxiety. It is a way to give them a feeling of control. There are parents reluctant to have medications for their children. This provides an alternative. I do feel, however, it can be used for almost anybody. We use very simple measures of success. We document change in days of school missed as an obvious and easy method of documenting success.

5

Current guideline-directed medical management for the pediatric population comes from the 2019 practice parameters of the American Academy of Neurology and American Headache Society. The guidelines endorse sufficient evidence to support the efficacy of ibuprofen, acetaminophen and triptans (oral sumatriptan/naproxen and zolmitriptan nasal spray) as acute management for adolescents with migraine. Practically, the use of Nerivio is clinically indicated if the adolescent is refractory to 2 or more guideline-drected medications, experiencing medication side effects, or has a history of medication overuse headache. First-line use of Nerivio is clinically warranted if the adolescent will not tolerate oral or intranasal medications. A positive response to Nerivio acutely could lead to preventative use, since the patient is already familiar with and has the device. However, there is no evidence to our knowledge that a negative response to Nerivio acutely would lead to lack of efficacy as a preventative measure

 

Question 2: We are seeking your rationale on whether using the Nerivio for migraine prophylaxis in individuals who are 12 years and older with episodic or chronic migraine, with or without aura, provides a clinically meaningful improvement in net health outcome. Please respond based on the evidence and your clinical experience.

Please address these points in your response:

#

Rationale

1

Established medical management is use of oral preventive medications that include antiseizure medications, antihypertensive medications, and tricyclic antidepressants, serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors, gepants, onabotulinum toxin A, nerve blocks, trigger point injections and CGRP monoclonal antibodies. Nerivio use is indicated when patients have experienced side effects to the above medications or prefer using a nonmedication treatment for prevention. Nerivio could be tried for prevention when patients prefer using a nonmedication treatment over an oral, injectable treatment or when a patient has a complex medical history and is already on multiple medications that may interact with the current standard medication treatments available. There are no clear clinical scenarios where Nerivio would be first line for prevention.

2

Current guidelines support the use of various classes of medications, as well as non-pharmacologic therapies such as lifestyle factor improvements, cognitive-behavioral therapy, etc. I will usually see more hesitancy from patients and families to take a medication every day (or multiple times per day) rather than only for acute treatments. With the current guideline-based pharmacologic therapies, there are frequent adverse effects, such as somnolence, brain fog, weight changes, and mood changes. In fact, yesterday I saw two separate patients for followup visits for migraine who had developed suicidal ideation in relation to two of the most commonly used first-line medications (despite screening prior to prescription). I do not give this example to make the case that medications are bad overall, just that we need more options as clinicians. Patients with adverse effects such as this are understandably hesitant to trial another medication (where I am frequently unable to say with absolute certainty that these effects will not also happen with this medication). As stated above, I have never seen a patient who has developed a serious adverse event from the Nerivio device.

 

In my opinion, I think that it makes sense to offer Nerivio as a first-line preventative therapy as the risk vs benefit ratio is very favorable, and as this should also be used as first-line acute therapy it is very beneficial to have one treatment for both acute and preventative roles. I don’t have a clear opinion on the efficacy of preventative treatment vs current medications as this is more difficult to compare in the real world between patients and as my patients with Nerivio are able to acutely treat migraines effectively which also confers a preventative effect.

3

Medical management for prevention of migraine should be offered to anyone with 4 or more migraine days per month or based on level of disability. Options include multiple pharmacologic classes such as CGRP, anti-seizure, anti-hypertensive, anti-depressants. Current guidelines outline that Nerivio may be considered as a treatment option in those with migraine although no clear definition has been established as to when it should be offered. In my clinical experience, Nerivio has a potential role in the treatment of any individual with migraine. Given its broad clearance, it can be used in any form of migraine. Given its very mild side effect profile, it is an appropriate choice for almost any individual. I recommend it to those under 18 as a first line option given its side effect profile and to those over 18 if they are not interested in medications or have contraindications to current therapies. It is an important adjunct treatment for those with migraine as well. I use it frequently in those who are not interested in pharmacologic treatment options or cannot tolerate pharmacologic treatment options. Many of the current preventive options have significant possible side effects which limit their use. It is often a first-line option in those with many medical comorbidities or pregnancy. For those with chronic migraine or high frequency episodic migraine, I will combine it with pharmacologic therapy as an additional option or for those who are refractory to treatment given its novel targeting of migraine pain. There is data to support a potential role for the treatment of medication overuse headache as it reduces the need for acute medications. I have patients trial Nerivio for prevention even if they have not had a good response to Nerivio for acute use. The device works on the sensitization of important brain regions which may create a different response than those using it acutely. I have seen this in my clinical practice. Positive response to Nerivio for prevention can be assessed by reduction in headache days and severe headache days.

4

Yes. Health outcome in kids is measured in school attendance. This is much improved with the device. It is indicated in all patients with migraine episodic or chronic.

5

Current guideline-directed medical management for the pediatric population comes from the 2019 practice parameters of the American Academy of Neurology and American Headache Society. The guidelines endorse sufficient evidence to support the efficacy of ibuprofen, acetaminophen and triptans (oral sumatriptan/naproxen and zolmitriptan nasal spray) for adolescents with migraine. Practically, the use of Nerivio is clinically indicated if the adolescent is refractory to 2 or more guideline-drected medications, experiencing medication side effects, or has a history of medication overuse headache. First-line use of Nerivio is clinically warranted if the adolescent will not tolerate oral or intranasal medications.

 

Question 3: We are seeking your rationale on whether using Nerivio for acute migraine treatment in individuals who are 8-11 years old with episodic or chronic migraine, with or without aura, provides a clinically meaningful improvement in net health outcome. Please respond based on the evidence and your clinical experience.

Please address these points in your response:

#

Rationale

1

I do not treat patients in this age group of 8 to 11yo so cannot comment on the clinical utility in this population.

2

Current guidelines are very similar to older patients, albeit with more limited options (only 1 triptan is FDA-approved to acutely treat patients in this age range). In my experience, I see no difference with using Nerivio in this population compared to the patients above the age of 12, other than the younger patients may or may not have access to a smartphone to initiate treatment (though are also more likely to be with a parent who does have access).

3

Medical management for this population includes the first-line use of ibuprofen followed by second-line use of migraine specific triptans. Patients should be counseled to treat early into an attack. There are no current guidelines on the use of Nerivio in acute treatment, but it is suggested for it to be offered to those looking for safe and medication free options for acute use. Given its very mild side effect profile, it is an appropriate choice for almost any individual. I would recommend it to those under 18 as a first line option for those looking to avoid pharmacologic therapies or with medical contraindications to NSAIDs. As an acute therapy, it provides another option for treating attacks and therefore reduces the risk of medication overuse headache and limits the amount of acute therapy patients need to consume.

4

Same as above. There should be no age restrictions.

5

Current guideline-directed medical management for the pediatric population comes from the 2019 practice parameters of the American Academy of Neurology and American Headache Society. The guidelines endorse sufficient evidence to support the efficacy of ibuprofen, acetaminophen and triptans (oral sumatriptan/naproxen and zolmitriptan nasal spray) for adolescents with migraine. Practically, the use of Nerivio is clinically indicated if the adolescent is refractory to 2 or more guideline-drected medications, experiencing medication side effects, or has a history of medication overuse headache. First-line use of Nerivio is clinically warranted if the adolescent will not tolerate oral or intranasal medications.

Question 4: We are seeking your rationale on whether using Nerivio for migraine prophylaxis in individuals who are 8-11 years old with episodic or chronic migraine, with or without aura, provides a clinically meaningful improvement in net health outcome. Please respond based on the evidence and your clinical experience.

Please address these points in your response:

#

Rationale

1

I do not treat patients in the 8 to 11 yo population so cannot comment on clinical utility in this population.

2

My response is similar to the previous question, with the addition that the parents of younger children are much more hesitant to use a preventative pharmacologic therapy than in older children.

3

There are few medication options that have been found to be effective for migraine prevention in the pediatric population. First line treatment options include behavioral treatments and trigger avoidance. Given the very limited set of options in this population, Nerivio is an important option for preventive treatment. It should be offered to any individual that requires preventive treatment for migraine (frequent and/or disabling migraine). I would consider this a first line option.

4

Same as above. No age restrictions.

5

Current guideline-directed medical management for the pediatric population comes from the 2019 practice parameters of the American Academy of Neurology and American Headache Society. Their conclusion was that the majority of randomized controlled trials studying the efficacy of preventative medications for pediatric migraine fail to demonstrate superiority to placebo. However, there is a new and exciting randomized controlled trial (abstract presented and published in 2025) that showed superiority of fremanezumab over placebo in decreasing monthly migraine days in patients aged 6-17. This medication is administered by subcutaneous injection, so from a practical standpoint, many pediatric patients may choose to do a trial of Nerivio for migraine prevention prior to getting monthly injections. From an evidence standpoint, there are no placebo-controlled trials for Nerivio in children or adolescents, and the FDA approval for Nerivio as a preventative treatment for children is based on adult studies. Turning to other preventative treatments, it is likely faster for patients to obtain an oral preventative medication, such as topiramate, than to obtain Nerivio device, but topiramate for headache prevention has not been approved by the FDA in children 8-11. Due to ease of use, Nerivio may be the first-line choice of prevention for children who do not want to take oral or injectable medications.

 

Question 5: Is use of Nerivio to abort an acute migraine episode contraindicated in patients who are already treating every other day per prophylactic instructions for use? How do patients and providers make decisions around prioritizing acute versus prophylactic therapy with Nerivio? Should patients who are already using a prophylactic therapy be offered Nerivio for add-on, non-pharmacologic prophylaxis?

For context, in the mITT dataset from Tepper et al (2023) (PMID: 36704988) - migraine days in the no-prophylaxis subsample was −4.5 ± 4.0 in REN arm, versus −1.5 ± 3.6 in the placebo arm with a net therapeutic gain of 3.0 days; p < 0.001.

The mean change in the prophylactic subsample was −3.5 ± 3.5, versus −1.5 ± 4.1 in the placebo arm with a net gain of 2.0 days; p = 0.032. The same subanalysis in the ITT dataset found for the no-prophylaxis subgroup: −4.3 ± 4.7 versus –1.1 ± 3.7, p < 0.001; in the prophylaxis subgroup −3.1 ± 3.8 versus −1.3 ± 5.1, p = 0.055.

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Rationale

1

There is no contraindication to use for both acute and chronic treatment. Depending on the patient's clinical situation, typically would use it for acute treatment first to assess clinical effectiveness.

 

Yes, Nerivio could be offered for add on treatment for patient already on preventive oral medications. The cost of this neuromodulation device relative to CGRP monoclonal antibodies, onabotulinum toxin A or gepants can be an advantage in treatment options.

2

I do not think that using Nerivio for prevention should exclude acute use, as I have not seen any significant harm even from multiple uses per day regularly. I am not able to recall a patient who has used the Nerivio for acute treatment and found it to be effective, but when using it more often for prevention saw any dropoff in efficacy without any confounding event (new concussion, etc). Overall, I would prioritize unlimited acute treatment, as the usage pattern will usually signal the efficacy of prevention in my experience.

3

Nerivio has such a mild safety profile that it can be considered for both indications in an individual with migraine. Preventive use helps to decrease sensitization of important pain structures which does not exclude its ability to work acutely on these structures. In those with frequent headache or migraine attacks, I tend to prioritize preventive use as not only does it reduce headache days but also severe headache days. Improved prevention tends to allow acute therapies to work better as well. It is very important to prevent episodic migraine from transitioning to chronic migraine as this increases healthcare utilization and costs as well as disability. In those with infrequent headache/migraine attacks, Nerivio for acute use may make more sense. I believe it is important to offer this as an adjunct therapy for individuals with migraine. It works differently than any medication or any other neuromodulation device. In combination with other treatment options, they target the migraine process in different ways and can often have an additive effect.

4

There is no reason to contraindicate use of Nerivio if using a preventative agent. It can be an add on.

5

It appears from the Tepper data set that Nerivio continues to be efficacious as an abortive despite being used as a preventative treatment, so there should not be a contraindication. However, there is no data for pediatric patients. I am not aware of any data that supports that patients who are already using other preventative agents should not be offered Nerivio for add-on.

 

Question 6: Is there anything else we should consider in our current review of remote electrical neuromodulation for migraine (ie, Nerivio)? How does the sufficiency of evidence concerning use of Nerivio compare to other neuromodulatory devices on the market (eg, Cefaly eTNS, gammaCore vagus nerve stimulation) for the treatment of migraine?

 

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Rationale

1

There is more publications regarding Nerivio in comparison to Cefaly, eTNS, gammaCore.The trial cost of Nerivio has been beneficial in allowing patients access to a novel therapeutic treatment for both acute and preventive treatment in a disease that has high prevalance but high morbidity and one of the most common diagnoses for outpatient and ED visits. From an epidemiology perspective and health system perspective, coverage for such a treatment could be beneficial from a cost effectiveness standpoint. The VA system has allowed access to all neuromodulation devices for the treatment of migraine- both acute and preventive treatment.

2

The Nerivio has more robust pediatric/adolescent data overall, both real-world and in controlled studies, when compared to the other devices. I do use the other devices in my clinical practice, but the up-front cost has been prohibitive in many cases. The Nerivio is also more discrete to use, which allows our patients to be more comfortable using the device and be able to initiate treatment faster. For example, the patient can leave class to go to the nurse’s office or bathroom for a few minutes to put the device on and initiate treatment, but after that they can return to class with the device covered by their jacket or sleeve. There is not as much concern for stigmatization as with some other devices, and it is better tolerated than most other devices.

3

There is more real world evidence on this topic and clinician experience that support the use of Nerivio for the acute and preventive treatment of migraine. Migraine is a very disabling condition, and treatment is important to reducing disability and healthcare burden and costs. While there are no head to head trials on neuromodulation devices for migraine, Nerivio has several studies showing efficacy both in clinical trials as well as real world data. It also has safety data that extends beyond any of the other devices. It is the device I recommend most frequently in my clinical practice.

4

No. It should be accepted.

5

The evidence for Nerivio in pediatric migraine is similar to that of Cefaly and gammaCore. All show about 65% efficacy for acute prevention in non-controlled trials and none have pediatric data for migraine prevention (all extrapolated from adult).

In general, I hope that Nerivio as a non-pharmacologic option for acute and preventive migraine therapy will be covered, particularly as there is weak (or no) evidence for many of the pharmacologic options we have for use in children, and there's evidence of benefit of Nerivio from the cited studies, which show safety and effectiveness in the pediatric population down to age 6.