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Preventive treatment for migraine in primary care, a population-based study in the Netherlands
Author(s) -
Friedo W. Dekker,
J. Dieleman,
Arie Knuistingh Neven,
Michel D. Ferrari,
Willem JJ Assendelft
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
cephalalgia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.57
H-Index - 125
eISSN - 1468-2982
pISSN - 0333-1024
DOI - 10.1177/0333102413490343
Subject(s) - medicine , migraine , migraine treatment , primary care , population , retrospective cohort study , pediatrics , cohort study , cohort , intensive care medicine , family medicine , psychiatry , environmental health
Background Preventive treatment of migraine contributes to reducing the impact of migraine but its extent of use in routine care is unknown.Objective The objective of this article is to assess current use, previous use, duration and course of preventive treatment of migraine in Dutch general practice.Methods We conducted a retrospective cohort study, for the period between 1997 and 2007, in the Interdisciplinary Processing of Clinical Information (IPCI) database, a GP research database in the Netherlands (source population of more than half a million subjects). All prevalent and incident migraine patients ( N = 7367) were included.Results About 13% of all migraine patients currently use preventive therapy and almost half of migraine patients have prior use. Of those starting with preventive treatment, 56% (95% CI: 54.3–64.7) still used it after nine months. There was a long delay between migraine diagnosis and preventive treatment start. Forty-four percent (95% CI 43.0–45.7) started preventive therapy in the study period.Conclusion This large primary-care database study shows that a limited number of patients are current users of preventive treatment, but many patients have prior use. After diagnosis there is often an extended time before preventive treatment is applied. Also there is often only one attempt. The continuation in time seems appropriate. Preventive therapy in migraine still deserves focus.

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