| Literature DB >> 22883540 |
Espen Saxhaug Kristoffersen1, Jørund Straand, Jūratė Saltytė Benth, Michael Bjørn Russell, Christofer Lundqvist.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic headache (headache ≥ 15 days/month for at least 3 months) affects 2-5% of the general population. Medication overuse contributes to the problem. Medication-overuse headache (MOH) can be identified by using the Severity of Dependence Scale (SDS). A "brief intervention" scheme (BI) has previously been used for detoxification from drug and alcohol overuse in other settings. Short, unstructured, individualised simple information may also be enough to detoxify a large portion of those with MOH. We have adapted the structured (BI) scheme to be used for MOH in primary care. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22883540 PMCID: PMC3488483 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-12-70
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Figure 1Flow-chart of study Figure illustrates main time line with the different phases with those mainly responsible for each phase (lower part). Upper part shows time-points for Patients data collection (2 week headache diaries (2w.diary) and interviews) as well as timing of various moments for the Investigator group and GPs with Brief Intervention training courses (BIC) for GPs and intervention (Brief intervention - BI and Business as usual – BAU respectively). Main outcome time-point at 3 months depicted with double arrow and bold writing. BI, Brief intervention; BIC, Brief Intervention course early or late; BAU, Business as usual; GP, General practitioner; Rand, randomisation.
Figure 2Flow-chart of GPs Brief Intervention for MOH strategy.
The five questions of the Severity Dependence Scale (SDS) adapted for headache medication
| 1. | Do you think your use of headache medication was out of control? (never/almost never=0, sometimes=1, often=2, always/nearly always=3) |
| 2. | Did the prospect of missing a dose make you anxious or worried? (scoring as for question 1) |
| 3. | Did you worry about your use of your headache medication? (scoring as for question 1) |
| 4. | Did you wish you could stop? (scoring as for question 1) |
| 5. | How difficult would you find it to stop or go without your headache medication? (not difficult=0, quite difficult=1, very difficult=2, impossible=3) |
Validated questionnaires used for additional outcomes with comments regarding relevance for present study and references to the literature list
| Most used general QoL questionnaire | Enables quality of life comparison with non-headache patients from the general population ., normal material for Norwegian population exists | [ | |
| Most used headache specific QoL instruments, recommended for RCTs of headache treatment | Enables comparison between various headache categories | [ | |
| Validated for detection of MOH in previous studies | Simple identification of MOH patients, comparison against scores for other addictive drugs | [ | |
| Validated structured interview for DSM-IV based diagnosis of substance dependency | Gold standard for dependency for validation of SDS | [ | |
| Widely used personality scale both in relation to drug dependency and in more general | Assessment of personality as a factor which may affect outcomes after a behavioural intervention, Norwegian population standards exist | [ | |
| Well validated scale for symptoms of psychological distress | Supplement to Eysenck for assessing degree of distress which may affect outcomes of behavioural intervention, Norwegian population standards exist | [ | |
| Most used scale in clinical materials for scoring depressive and anxiety symptoms | Assessment of depression and anxiety as comorbidities of chronic headache which may affect outcomes of intervention, Norwegian population standards exist | [ |
Outcome measures and time points for application of the various outcomes (statistical calculations are further described in the Statistics section)
| | | |
| Difference between BI and BAU in: | | |
| a) number of headache days per month | X | |
| b) number of headache medication days per month | X | |
| Change relative to baseline in | | |
| a) number of headache days per month | X | |
| b) number of headache medication days per month | X | |
| | | |
| Difference between BI and BAU in proportion of cases without chronic headache and without medication overuse | X | |
| Change relative to baseline in proportion of patients with more than | | |
| a) 25% reduction of headache days | X | X |
| b) 50% reduction of headache days | X | X |
| Change relative to baseline in headache index (Area under curve for headache intensity versus time) | X | X |
| Change relative to baseline in | | |
| a) headache days from headache diary | X | X |
| b) medication days from diary | X | X |
| Change relative to baseline in average headache intensity recorded by VAS (from headache diary) | X | X |
| Change relative to 3 month follow-up in self-reported health related costs | | X |
| Change relative to 3 month follow-up in quality of life recorded as SF-36 and MIDAS/HIT-6 | | X |
| Change relative to baseline in: | | |
| a) number of headache days per month | | X |
| b) number of headache medication days per month | | X |
| Relapse rate compared with status at 3 month | X |
Abbreviations: BI brief intervention, BAU business as usual, VAS visual analogue scale, SF-36 short form-36, MIDAS migraine disability assessment score, HIT-6 headache impact test-6.