AI Article Synopsis

  • Migraine management often involves poor use of preventive therapies, leading to overreliance on acute medications among newly diagnosed patients, highlighting a need for improved treatment patterns.
  • A study of 284,719 migraine patients showed that while 59.1% used preventive treatments, 67.9% discontinued them within five months, frequently switching back to acute medicines.
  • Many acute treatment users relied on triptans and non-migraine-specific medications, with significant exposure to risk factors like opioid dependence, revealing troubling trends in first-line treatment approaches.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Migraine management is characterized by the poor use of preventive therapy and the overuse of acute medications. An analysis of current treatment patterns in migraineurs is needed to improve care in this patient population. The aim of this study was to describe treatment patterns and healthcare utilization of newly diagnosed migraine patients.

Methods: This was a retrospective observation study of newly diagnosed migraine patients (no indication of migraine in the past year) identified in the IBM MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters database from 1 January 2010 to 30 June 2014. The final study population comprised persons aged 18-64 years at index (new diagnosis of migraine) with 12 months of continuous enrollment in an insurance plan with medical and pharmacy benefits pre-index and post-index. Treatment patterns and healthcare resource utilization were assessed during the post-index period (at least 12-months).

Results: Of the 1,588,666 migraine patients identified in the database as potentially eligible to participate in the study, 284,719 (17.9%) met the final inclusion criteria. Patients generally used acute and preventive therapies to manage migraine attacks, with most patients using preventive therapy (59.1%). However, 67.9% of those using preventive therapy discontinued the current therapy, with a median time to discontinuation of 5 months. Most of the patients who discontinued preventative therapy also used an acute treatment to manage migraine attacks after discontinuation (77.6%), generally in the year following discontinuation (68.4%). Patients on acute therapies were found to use triptans excessively (1.6%) and other non-migraine-specific acute medications for treatment (7.1%). Acute patients were also at risk of opioid dependence (12.0%) and commonly received opioids or barbiturates as first-line therapy (34.1%).

Conclusion: Newly diagnosed migraine patients are not being properly treated, as indicated by their excessive use of acute therapies and short time on preventive treatment before discontinuation of that treatment. Further study of the reasons why patients discontinue preventive therapy (adverse events, no response, etc.) and continue to excessively use acute treatments once their treatment regimen has been established is needed.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7229133PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40120-020-00179-3DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

migraine patients
16
preventive therapy
16
treatment patterns
12
newly diagnosed
12
diagnosed migraine
12
patients
10
migraine
9
acute
8
acute medications
8
treatment
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!