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Chronic versus episodic migraine: The 15‐day threshold does not adequately reflect substantial differences in disability across the full spectrum of headache frequency
Author(s) -
Ishii Ryotaro,
Schwedt Todd J.,
Dumkrieger Gina,
Lalvani Nim,
Craven Audrey,
Goadsby Peter J.,
Lipton Richard B.,
Olesen Jes,
Silberstein Stephen D.,
Burish Mark J.,
Dodick David W.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
headache: the journal of head and face pain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.14
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1526-4610
pISSN - 0017-8748
DOI - 10.1111/head.14154
Subject(s) - migraine , medicine , interquartile range , physical therapy , chronic migraine , pediatrics
Objective To evaluate whether the 15‐day threshold of headache days per month adequately reflects substantial differences in disability across the full spectrum of migraine. Background The monthly frequency of headache days defines migraine subtypes and has crucial implications for epidemiological and clinical research as well as access to care. Methods The patients with migraine ( N  = 836) who participated in the American Registry for Migraine Research, which is a multicenter, longitudinal patient registry, between February 2016 and March 2020, were divided into four groups based on monthly headache frequency: Group 1 (0–7 headache days/month, n  = 286), Group 2 (8–14 headache days/month, n  = 180), Group 3 (15–23 headache days/month, n  = 153), Group 4 (≥24 headache days/month, n  = 217). Disability (MIDAS), Pain intensity (NRS), Work Productivity and Activity Impairment (WPAI), Pain Interference (PROMIS‐PI), Patient Health Questionnaire‐4 (PHQ‐4), and General Anxiety Disorder‐7 (GAD‐7) scores were compared. Results Mean (standard deviation [SD]) age was 46 (13) years (87.9% [735/836] female). The proportion of patients in each group was as follows: Group 1 (34.2% [286/836]), Group 2 (21.5% [180/836]), Group 3 (18.3% [153/836]), and Group 4 (26.0% [217/836]). There were significant relationships with increasing disability, lost productive time, and pain interference in higher headache frequency categories. There were no significant differences between Group 2 and Group 3 for most measures (NRS, all WPAI scores, PROMIS‐PI, GAD‐7, and PHQ‐4), although MIDAS scores differed (median [interquartile range (IQR)]; 38 [20–58] vs. 55 [30–90], p  < 0.001). Patients in Group 1 had significantly lower MIDAS (median [IQR];16 [7–30], p  < 0.001), WPAI‐% total active impairment (mean (SD): Group 1 [30.9 (26.8)] vs. Group 2 [39.2 (24.5), p  = 0.017], vs. Group 3 [45.9 (24.1), p  < 0.001], vs. Group 4 [55.3 (23.0), p  < 0.001], and PROMIS‐PI‐T score (Group 1 [60.3 (7.3)] vs. Group 2 [62.6 (6.4), p  = 0.008], vs. Group 3 [64.6 (5.6), p  < 0.001], vs. Group 4 [66.8 (5.9), p  < 0.001]) compared to all other groups. Patients in Group 4 had significantly higher MIDAS (median (IQR): Group 4 [90 (52–138)] vs. Group 1 [16 (7–30), p  < 0.001], vs. Group 2 [38 (20–58), p  < 0.001], vs. Group 3 [55 (30–90), p  < 0.001], WPAI‐%Presenteeism (Group 4 [50.4 (24.4)] vs. Group 1 [28.8 (24.9), p  < 0.001], vs. Group 2 [34.9 (22.3), p  < 0.001], vs. Group 3 [40.9 (22.3), p  = 0.048], WPAI‐% total work productivity impairment (Group 4 [55.9 (26.1)] vs. Group 1 [32.1 (37.6), p  < 0.001], vs. Group 2 [38.3 (24.0), p  < 0.001], vs. Group 3 [44.6 (24.4), p  = 0.019]), and WPAI‐%Total activity impairment (Group 4 [55.3 (23.0)] vs. Group 1 [30.9 (26.8), p  < 0.001], vs. Group 2 [39.2 (24.5), p  < 0.001], vs. Group 3 [45.9 (24.1), p  = 0.025]) scores compared with all other groups. Conclusion Our data suggest that the use of a 15 headache day/month threshold to distinguish episodic and chronic migraine does not capture the burden of illness nor reflect the treatment needs of patients. These results have important implications for future refinements in the classification of migraine.

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