FDA approves Qulipta (atogepant), a new preventive migraine drug

October 2, 2021

Atogepant (Qulipta) is a new migraine drug that was just approved by the FDA for the preventive treatment of migraines. It is the third drug in the family of gepants. Gepants block the CGRP receptor. CGRP is a chemical released during a migraine attack. In the past three years, the FDA approved four injectable preventive migraine drugs that also block CGRP. Gepants are taken by mouth.

The dose of atogepant is 10 mg, 30 mg or 60 mg taken daily, once a day. The primary efficacy endpoint in clinical trials was the change from baseline in mean monthly migraine days over the 12-week treatment period. There was a drop of 3.7, 3.9, and 4.2 in the number of mean monthly migraine days in the 10 mg, 30 mg, and 60 mg doses, respectively.

Side effects – assessed in almost 2,000 patients – were infrequent and mild. Nausea occurred in 5%, 6%, and 9% on 10 mg, 30 mg, and 60 mg respectively, constipation in 6% on all three doses, and fatigue or somnolence in 4%, 4%, and 6%.

Ubrogepant and rimegepant, two other gepants, were first approved to be taken as needed, whenever a migraine strikes. Rimegepant recently was also approved for the prevention of migraines. Even though gepants are very similar they often differ in how they work in an individual patient. Some of my patients find that ubrogepant works much better than rimegepant while for others the opposite is true. I am certain that some patients will find a big difference in the way rimegepant and atogepant work for them. This is why it is useful to have a few drugs in every therapeutic category.

Written by
Alexander Mauskop, MD
Continue reading
May 21, 2026
Research
Your Brain Has Many Pathways, And TMS Can Now Use Them
A groundbreaking University of Iowa study shows that personalized fMRI-guided TMS can now reach and modulate the deep hippocampus — the brain’s command center for memory, emotion, and migraine — without surgery or heavy medications. By mapping each patient’s unique neural pathways, TMS delivers precise stimulation to surface “control points” that influence deep brain structures. Generic approaches barely work, but individualized targeting produces clear, measurable changes. At our headache clinic, we combine TMS and fMRI to offer this advanced, personalized treatment for migraines, depression, PTSD, anxiety, and more.
Read article
May 10, 2026
Research
Elismetrep: A Promising New Experimental Migraine Treatment
Elismetrep is a promising experimental migraine medication that targets the TRPM8 pathway rather than serotonin or CGRP. Early clinical trials suggest it may offer a new option for patients who do not respond well to current treatments.
Read article
May 6, 2026
Alternative Therapies
New Research on Brain Excitability and TMS Treatment for Migraine
New research shows how the brain dynamically regulates excitability in real time—and why this matters for transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) as a treatment for migraine.
Read article
Insights from Dr. Alexander Mauskop on headaches and migraines
Subscribe to the Blog.
Subscribe
Subscribe