The most common modern usage of Feverfew is in combating migraines and headaches, and several human interventions have been conducted at this point in time.
One study using a liquid sublingual (placed under the tongue) mixture of ginger and Feverfew as in persons with migraines for greater than 1 year with or without aura with 2-6 migraines per month found that using the combination as treatment (to be taken when a migraine was about to occur, as assessed by headache) that over a month long period the severity of headaches was lesser with the combination supplement (1.41 on a scale of 1-3 relative to placebo's 1.67) and was associated with decreased pain 2 hours after treatment rather than a slight increase or stability seen in placebo.[18] 16% of placebo said to be pain-free at 2 hours whereas 32% of treatment reported the same.[18] On a battery of measures related to migraines, treatment was significantly more effective at suppressing 'pulsating' and 'nausea' at the onset of the migraine and 2 hours later retained these benefits but also became more effective than placebo at reducing sensitivity to light and sound as well as reducing how much migraines 'worsen with activity'. No influence on vomiting or how 'one-sided' the migraine was were seen.[18] Sublinguial combination therapy of ginger and Feverfew has been seen elsewhere,[19] but had a smaller sample and was open-label without control; lesser quality compared to the aforementioned study.[19]
Sublingual combination therapy of ginger and feverfew appears to be effective as a treatment for migraines, taken at migraine onset for rapid relief. Minimal studies, however, with invested interest (no manipulation of results appear to exist, however)
One using a thrice daily carbon dioxide extract of Feverfew at 6.25mg thrice a day (MIG-99 brand name at 18.25mg total, high parthenolide content) noted that over 4 months in persons suffering from migraines with or without aura with 3-6 migraines a month for at least a year and 4-6 migraines during the 28 day run-in phase that treatment of Feverfew resulted in fever attacks during weeks 5-12 (-39.5%, -27% in placebo) with no furthering beneficial results between weeks 12 and 28, although consistently outperforming placebo henceforth.[20] There was no significant difference between treatment and placebo when measured after the first 4 weeks, however.[20]
This same extract (MIG-99) was used previously in a study with similar design, where benefits over placebo were not demonstrated.[21] Subgroup analysis showing that Feverfew was significantly effective only in those with high migraine frequency prompted the aforementioned study,[20] and the combination suggests that Feverfew may not be significantly beneficial for minor headaches and migraines any more than placebo but be significantly effective for those with worse intensity and frequency.
Another (independent) study was conducted pairing white willow bark (the natural source of aspirin precursor, salicyclic acid) with Feverfew and noted up to 57.2-61.7% reduced attack frequency and 38.7-62.6% attack intensity (first numbers measured at 6 weeks, latter at 12) relative to baseline, but had no control group and thus the results seen were treatment combined with placebo.[22] This study, however, noted that prolonged usage of Feverfew had no furthering influence on attack frequency but continued to reduce intensity up to 12 weeks which was the last recorded measurement.[22]
Finally, one study using Feverfew in isolation still noted decreases in migraine intensity and frequency over 2 months of treatment (trial was four months in length, but groups switched half-way through with no warning in a cross-over design with no wash-out period).[23] The treatment was 70-84mg of crushed fresh leaves, put into capsules, and significant reductions were seen in nausea/vomiting as well as migraine frequency with a trend towards reduced intensity and no affect on migraine duration.[23]
Only one study currently provides evidence against Feverfew, suggesting that 25mg Riboflavin (a B-vitamin) used as placebo was equally effective as combination therapy of Feverfew (100mg at 0.7% parthenolide), Magnesium (300mg with equal parts oxide and citrate), and Riboflavin (400mg).[24] Over 3 months, the amount of persons that recorded a 50% reduction or greater in migraine frequency was similar in both groups although both groups did report significant improvements from baseline. This study has been criticized elsewhere[25] as the high placebo response (44%) was unbecoming of an adequately powered trial and that the dose of feverfew, paired with a lack of data on sourcing and quality, undermines the quality of the intervention.[25]
Some results that effects of Feverfew against placebo occur mostly after 4 weeks in time, improve in the ability to reduce the frequency and intensity of migraines up to 12 weeks, and then maintain benefits henceforth. Reductions of both frequency and intensity have been seen, and mixed yet minimal results on migraine duration (may only apply to sublingual)
Three interventions[18][22][20] have used branded Feverfew products, whereas the following were sponsored by the provider of the products.[20][22] No authors declared a conflict of interest, but in one study the company was involved in the study design.[20] Of all human interventions, no clinically relevant side effects were demonstrated that differed from placebo. The study using sublinguial delivery did not more mouth numbing associated with treatment than placebo.[18]
Overall, though, meta-analysis of the data appears to be difficult due to the heterogenity of the experiments above.[26]
Overall, there are plenty of studies on Feverfew and Migraine but when the studies that use other compounds (White willow bark, ginger) are excluded and company interventions are taken into account, the body of evidence is diminished somewhat. There is still considerable evidence that Feverfew outperforms placebo for persons with high migraine frequency (3-6 monthly) but it is questionable for lesser frequencies