Literature DB >> 29392600

Poor medical care for people with migraine in Europe - evidence from the Eurolight study.

Zaza Katsarava1, Maka Mania2, Christian Lampl3, Johanna Herberhold4, Timothy J Steiner5,6.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Migraine is prevalent everywhere, and disabling. It is also neglected: consequently, it is under-diagnosed and undertreated. We analysed data from the Eurolight study on consultations and utilization of migraine-specific medications as indicators of adequacy of medical care in Europe.
METHODS: Eurolight was a cross-sectional questionnaire-based survey in 10 European countries. Sampling was population-based in six (Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Spain) and from consecutive patients attending general practitioners (GPs) for any reason in three (Austria, France, UK). Additional samples in Netherlands and Spain, and the only sample from Ireland, were recruited by lay headache organisations. We recorded migraine prevalence and frequency, and utilization of medical services and medications (acute and preventative).
RESULTS: Among 9247 participants (mean age 43.9 ± 13.9 years, M/F ratio 1:1.4), 3466 (37.6%) were diagnosed with migraine (definite or probable). Of these, 1175 (33.8%) reported frequent migraine (> 5 days/month) and might clearly expect benefit from, and therefore had need of, preventative medication. In population-based samples, minorities of participants with migraine had seen a GP (9.5-18.0%) or specialist (3.1-15.0%), and smaller minorities received adequate treatment: triptans 3.4-11.0%, with Spain outlying at 22.4%; preventative medication (1.6-6.4% of those eligible, with Spain again outlying at 13.7%). Proportions were greater in GP-based samples (13.6-24.5% using triptans, 4.4-9.1% on preventative medication) and among those from lay organisations (46.2-68.2% and 16.0-41.7%). Participants with migraine who had consulted specialists (3.1-33.8%) were receiving the best care by these indicators; those treated by GPs (9.5-29.6%) fared less well, and those dependent on self-medication (48.0-84.2%) were, apparently, inadequately treated.
CONCLUSION: In wealthy European countries, too few people with migraine consult physicians, with proportionately too many of these seeing specialists, and migraine-specific medications are used inadequately even among those who do. These findings represent yet another call for action in Europe to improve care for people with headache. Education of both health-care providers and the public should be central to this action.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Eurolight project; Europe; Global campaign against headache; Headache; Health care; Health policy; Impact; Migraine

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29392600      PMCID: PMC5794675          DOI: 10.1186/s10194-018-0839-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Headache Pain        ISSN: 1129-2369            Impact factor:   7.277


Background

Headache disorders, including migraine, are extremely common [1]. From a public-health perspective, they are also among the most disabling at population level: according to the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study, headache disorders collectively are the third highest cause in the world of years of healthy life lost to disability (YLDs), migraine alone being sixth (third in those aged under 50 years) [2-5]. The lost-productivity and consequential financial costs are enormous [6]. It might be expected that headache disorders would, everywhere, be considered important: as a personal medical problem by people directly affected by them, and as a public-health priority by health-care providers and health policy-makers. The reality is different. People with headache are under-diagnosed and undertreated not only in poorer countries with limited resources and restricted access to medical care but also, evidence indicates, in wealthy Europe and North America [7, 8]. We sought to verify this in Europe by analysing data from the Eurolight study. Eurolight was an initiative supported by the European Commission Executive Agency for Health and Consumers (EHAC), and a partnership activity within the Global Campaign against Headache [9, 10] conducted by Lifting The Burden (LTB), a UK-registered non-governmental organization in official relations with the World Health Organization [11]. Eurolight gathered data on headache disorders in a cross-sectional survey in 10 countries, which together represented > 60% of the adult population (18–65 years) of the European Union (EU): Austria, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Spain and United Kingdom (UK) [12]. The survey included diagnostic enquiry regarding primary headaches and further enquiry into headache-attributed burden and utilisation of medical services and medication for headache. Here we present data on consultations and use of migraine-specific acute and preventative medications, and analyse these as indicators of adequacy of medical care for people with migraine in Europe.

Methods

Ethics

The National Ethics Committee of Luxembourg gave overall approval of the protocol and provisions for data protection. Further approvals were obtained from national and/or local ethics committees wherever needed, since the methods for recruitment of participants differed between countries. In every country, prospective participants received written information explaining the project and its purpose.

Study design

The methods of the Eurolight project have been described in detail elsewhere [12], and are summarised here. Eurolight was a cross-sectional questionnaire-based survey of adults (18–65 years) in the EU, sampling from 10 countries. The sampling and questionnaire-distribution methods, summarised in Table 1, varied between countries according to what was feasible [12]: in six countries (Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Spain), samples were population-based; in three (Austria, France, UK), general practitioners (GPs) recruited consecutive patients attending for any reason. Additional samples in Spain and Netherlands, and the only sample in Ireland, were recruited through lay organisations [12].
Table 1

Summary of sampling and data collection methods in each country [adapted from reference [12]

CountryDenominator (n)Responders (n)Responder proportion (%)Gender (% female)Target population and mode of distribution of questionnaire
Studies with a general-population basis
Germany300033811.357Random general-population sample from urban and rural areas, contacted by regular post
Italy350050014.358Stratified general-population sample from urban and rural areas, contacted by regular post
Lithuania113761654.259General-population sample in and around Kaunas (urban and rural), contacted by door-to-door cold-calling and personally interviewed by trained medical students
Luxembourg6498202331.158Stratified general-population sample contacted by regular post
Netherlands-populationunknown2414incalculable50Stratified general-population sample contacted by internet
Spain-workplace170099958.859Stratified sample of postal services employees, contacted by internal post by occupational health physicians
Studies conducted in general practice settings
Austriaunknown, but not > 6000646incalculable70Consecutive patients consulting GPs or neurologists for any reason; questionnaire handed directly
France240087636.568Consecutive patients consulting GPs for any reason; questionnaire handed directly
UK72012817.8*65Consecutive patients attending GPs for any reason; questionnaire handed directly
Studies among members of lay headache organizations
Irelandmembers 1500 relatives unknown1957313.0incalculable66Members of Migraine Association of Ireland and their non-biological relatives, contacted by regular post
Netherlands-laymembers 500 partners unknown33711567.4incalculable57Random sample of members of Nederlandse Vereniging van Hoofdpijnpatiënten and (where existing) their non-headache-affected partners, contacted by regular post
Spain-lay30027290.762Members of Asociacion Española de Pacientes con Cefalea (AEPAC) and their family; questionnaires distributed by hand via helpers of AEPAC
Summary of sampling and data collection methods in each country [adapted from reference [12] The survey used the same structured questionnaire in all countries [13]. It had multiple parts. Demographic enquiry included age, gender, marital status and socio-economic status. Screening questions for headache (with an enquiry timeframe of the preceding year) were followed, in those responding positively, by headache-diagnostic questions based on ICHD-II [14]. To avoid diagnostic confusion, participants identifying more than one headache type were asked to report only on the one that was most bothersome to them. Enquiry into health-care utilisation entailed questions on use for headache of acute and preventative medications, consultations for headache (yes or no) with nurse, GP, neurologist or headache specialist, investigations for headache (MRI, CT, X-rays of the neck, blood tests, ophthalmic examination), and admissions (number) to hospital because of headache.

Analysis and statistics

Diagnoses were made from questionnaire responses by computerized algorithm [15]. This first identified, and separated, participants reporting headache on ≥15 days/month, of whom additional questions had enquired into frequency of acute medication use. Probable medication-overuse headache (pMOH) was diagnosed when, in addition, simple analgesics were used on ≥15 days/month or medication including compound analgesics, opioids, triptans and/or ergots was taken on ≥10 days/month. A diagnosis of pMOH trumped all other diagnoses. The remainder of this group were diagnosed as “other headache on ≥15 days/month”. To all others, who had headache on < 15 days/month, the algorithm applied ICHD-II criteria for definite migraine, definite tension-type headache (TTH), probable migraine and probable TTH in that order. Analysis focused on participants in whom migraine was diagnosed, not distinguishing between those meeting criteria for definite migraine or probable migraine [12, 15, 16]. We identified those with migraine on > 5 days/month as clearly eligible for preventative medication. We selected the following as indicators of adequacy of care: a) proportion receiving migraine-specific acute medications (triptans); b) proportion of those clearly eligible receiving any preventative medication; c) proportions receiving medical care through GP or specialist (neurologist or specialist in headache medicine). In our analysis, consultation with specialist(s) trumped consultation with GP(s). Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS. We describe categorical variables in terms of frequency (n) and proportions (%), and continuous variables in terms of means ± standard deviations (SDs). We used 2 × 2 chi-squared to compare proportions receiving treatments in specialist and primary care.

Results

Eurolight collected 9247 correctly completed questionnaires from participants in the 10 countries (mean age 43.9 ± 13.9 years, M/F ratio 1:1.4 [Table 1]). The principal results have been reported in detail previously [17]. Here we analysed the data of 3466 people (37.6%) with migraine (definite or probable) (Table 2).
Table 2

Sociodemographic features of participants with migraine (N = 3466)

CountrynFemales (%)Age (years) (mean ± SD)Living with spouse or partner (%)Employed or self-employed (%)
Studies with a general-population basis
Germany10967.941.6 ± 11.95765
Italy22170.140.2 ± 11.79471
Lithuania14980.542.5 ± 12.36766
Luxembourg66967.938.2 ± 11.27369
Netherlands-population81560.240.5 ± 12.56869
Spain-workplace40168.641.7 ± 11.17183
Studies conducted in health-care settings
Austria26381.444.2 ± 13.57467
France33776.043.1 ± 13.57864
UK49100.0%41.7 ± 16.06463
Studies among members of lay headache organizations
Ireland15288.848.5 ± 13.17159
Netherlands-lay19583.146.5 ± 10.97865
Spain-lay10676.440.8 ± 11.07184
Sociodemographic features of participants with migraine (N = 3466) The demography of participants with migraine was broadly similar in all countries: they were on average approximately 40 years old, two thirds or more were female, most were married or living with a partner, and most were employed or self-employed (Table 2). Across countries, one third (1175; 33.8%) reported frequent migraine (> 5 days/month) (Table 3) and therefore had clear need of preventative medication.
Table 3

Utilization of medical care by participants with migraine (N = 3466)

CountryNUsing triptans (of all with migraine) n (%)Migraine on ≥5 days/month n (%)Using preventative medication (of those with migraine on ≥5 days/month) n (%)Consulting health professionals n (%)
SpecialistGeneral practitionerNon-medicalNone
Studies with a general-population basis
Germany10912 (11.0)42 (38.5)1 (2.4)7 (6.4)14 (12.8)5 (4.6)83 (76.1)
Italy22114 (6.3)61 (27.6)1 (1.6)14 (6.3)21 (9.5)15 (6.8)171 (77.4)
Lithuania1495 (3.4)62 (41.6)2 (3.2)16 (10.7)23 (15.4)2 (1.3)108 (72.5)
Luxemburg66948 (7.2)219 (32.7)10 (4.6)39 (5.8)105 (15.7)27 (4.0)498 (74.4)
Netherlands-population81575 (9.2)171 (20.8)11 (6.4)25 (3.1)106 (13.0)36 (4.4)648 (79.5)
Spain-workplace40190 (22.4)153 (38.2)21 (13.7)60 (15.0)72 (18.0)28 (7.0)241 (60.1)
Studies conducted in general practice settings
Austria26337 (14.1)106 (40.3)7 (6.6)46 (17.5)26 (10.0)14 (5.3)177 (67.3)
France33746 (13.6)91 (27.0)4 (4.4)7 (2.1)81 (24.0)22 (6.5)227 (67.3)
UK4912 (24.5)22 (44.9)2 (9.1)11 (22.4)7 (14.3)0 (0)31 (63.3)
Studies among members of lay headache organizations
Ireland15294 (61.8)78 (51.3)23 (29.5)34 (22.4)45 (29.6)6 (3.9)67 (44.1)
Netherlands-lay195133 (68.2)120 (61.5)50 (41.7)66 (33.8)26 (13.3)21 (11.0)82 (42.1)
Spain-lay10649 (46.2)50 (47.2)8 (16.0)25 (23.6)27 (25.5)10 (9.4)44 (41.5)
Utilization of medical care by participants with migraine (N = 3466) Utilisation of migraine-specific medications varied greatly between countries. The ranges were, for triptans, 3.4–68.2% of all participants with migraine and, for preventative medications, 1.6–41.7% of those deemed clearly eligible for them. These ranges were considerably distorted by the studies among members of lay headache organisations. In population-based samples, 3.4–22.4% of participants with migraine used triptans and 1.6–13.7% of those eligible used preventative medication. In this group, Spain-workplace was an outlier, with values in each case double those of the next highest, while Lithuania appeared to be an outlier for low use of triptans (3.4%) and Italy for low use of preventative medication (1.6% of those eligible) (Table 3). Proportions were higher in GP-based samples (13.6–24.5% using triptans, 4.4–9.1% on preventative medication), and much higher among those from lay organisations (46.2–68.2% and 16.0–41.7%) (Table 3). Proportions of people receiving specific acute or preventative medications did not depend an age or socio-economic or marital status (data not shown). These medications were not widely available without prescription; therefore, they were accessible only to a limited extent by people treating themselves or consulting a nurse rather than a physician. With regard to triptan use, not only was this highly dependent on consultation with a physician but also the proportions using triptans were greater in those seeing specialists (mean 51.3%) than in those treated by GPs (mean 35.9%; chi-squared = 62.1; p < 0.001) (Fig. 1). Similarly, those clearly eligible to receive preventative medications were more likely to do so from specialists (mean 26.0%) than from GPs (mean 14.1%; chi-squared = 10.1; p < 0.001) (Fig. 2). Participants with migraine who had consulted specialists (2.1–33.8% across all studies) were receiving the best care by these indicators; those treated by GPs (9.5–29.6%) fared less well, and the larger numbers dependent on self-medication (48.0–84.2%) appeared to be inadequately treated. Probability of consultation was itself highly dependent on the source of the sample (Table 3). In the studies with a general-population basis, a minority of participants (15.8–33.0%) had done so: 3.1–15.0% had consulted a specialist (averaged across countries: 6.8%), and 9.5–18.0% had seen a GP (average: 14.4%). In studies conducted in general practice settings, 26.1–36.7% of participants had consulted, and in studies among members of lay headache organizations, 47.1–52.0% had done so, with the ranges for specialist and GP as shown in Table 3. The differences reflect bias in the latter samples.
Fig. 1

Proportion (%) of participants with migraine using triptans, by country and by whom consulting. NL-pop: Netherlands-population; Spain-work: Spain-workplace; NL-lay: Netherlands-lay

Fig. 2

Proportion (%) of eligible participants with using migraine-preventative treatment, by country and by whom consulting. NL-pop: Netherlands-population; Spain-work: Spain-workplace; NL-lay: Netherlands-lay

Proportion (%) of participants with migraine using triptans, by country and by whom consulting. NL-pop: Netherlands-population; Spain-work: Spain-workplace; NL-lay: Netherlands-lay Proportion (%) of eligible participants with using migraine-preventative treatment, by country and by whom consulting. NL-pop: Netherlands-population; Spain-work: Spain-workplace; NL-lay: Netherlands-lay

Discussion

EU countries represent a relatively wealthy area of the world, albeit with some variation. Our study in 10 of these countries confirms that, even among these, migraine is under-treated. At best in the general-population samples (setting aside Spain-workplace), 26.1% of those with migraine in Lithuania were consulting a physician for it, triptans were in use by 11.0% in Germany, and preventative medication by 6.4%, of those who appeared to be clear candidates for it, in Netherlands. At worst, the proportions were as low as 15.8% consulting (in Italy), 3.4% using triptans (in Lithuania) and 1.6% of those eligible using preventative medication (again in Italy). The Spanish workplace-based sample fared better on all counts – 33.0%, 20.4% and 13.7%, suggesting facilitated access to health care among this sample of employed people. Contact with GPs, and with specialists more so, was associated with higher use of these medications, which is unsurprising not only because they are in the main prescription-only but also because worse-affected people might be more likely to consult. The samples recruited by general practitioners, and more so those from lay organisations, showed higher proportions consulting and utilising specific medications, which we attribute to the expected selection bias in these two groups. The latter did better for use of triptans (60.9% of those with migraine), but, even among these, fewer than one third (32.7%) of those clearly eligible were using preventative drugs. While the proportions in contact with doctors and receiving migraine-specific drugs in this study were self-evidently low, at issue here is what, in a perfect world, they should be. In a resource-limited world, not everyone with migraine can receive professional health care, but neither should they: people with relatively mild and infrequent attacks who self-manage adequately with over-the-counter (OTC) remedies should not be brought into the health-care system. Published recommendations are that about 50% of people with migraine can adequately self-manage [18], suggesting that the other 50% need to consult at some level. To a large extent, need for consultation is driven by the inefficacy of the OTC medications and the need for prescription drugs. Assessed by the outcome measure sustained headache relief (SHR), arguably an adequate if imperfect outcome [19], aspirin 900–1000 mg has a predicted efficacy of 39% (headache relief at 2 h [HR] 52%) [20] and ibuprofen 400 mg of 45% (HR 57%) [21]. For paracetamol 1000 mg there are no data for SHR but HR = 56% [22]. What our findings indicate is that, even in these relatively well-resourced countries, perhaps only half of those who would be expected to benefit from physician-consultation actually received it. Of those who did, proportions seen by GPs (9.5–18.0% in the population-based groups) and specialists (3.1–15.0%) were not very dissimilar. It is true that those seeing specialists might also be seeing GPs since, in such cases, we recorded only the former. But the question raised is this: is it necessary, or cost-effective, for migraine care to be thus distributed between specialists and GPs? Recommendations are that only the small minority of complicated cases should be referred from primary care to specialists [7, 18]. Furthermore, the quality of that care, when it was received, appeared far from perfect. If need for triptans is a reason to consult physicians, at least the majority of those doing so might be expected to receive them. While this was barely achieved (51.3%) among those seeing specialists, only 35.9% did so from GPs. Worse, while use of preventative medication by people with > 5 migraine days/month ought by any objective standard to be close to 100%, the best we saw outside the self-selecting lay-organization members was 13.7%, and this was in an employee group with, probably, facilitated access to care. The picture is therefore not encouraging: as reflections of reach and adequacy of headache services for headache, these findings indicate depressingly poor performance in the EU. The situation may even be worse than suggested. On the subject of bias, the Eurolight project as a whole suffered from low participation proportions – on average, 27.5% in the non-lay samples [17]. Some participation bias was likely, with the probability that, through self-selection, samples were preferentially constituted of more demanding participants, whose needs and health-care utilisation were likely to be higher than average. Several earlier studies have found much the same. In Germany, among 7431 adults, awareness of migraine was low among those who had it, as was recognition of it by health-care providers [23]. Also in Germany, in three regions of the country, a population-based study of 10,000 people found only 8% of those with migraine used triptans and only 2.3% received preventative treatment, both positively associated with socio-economic status [24] and suggesting inequitable access to health care. Similar results emerged from France: among approximately 10,000 people studied, about 60% of the 1179 with migraine were unaware of the diagnosis, only 20% used triptans and only 2.3% received preventative medication [25]. In Italy, a study of 2675 patients in 10 headache centres revealed that only 26.8% with migraine were previously correctly diagnosed, only 17.2% were using triptans and only 4.8% were using migraine-specific preventative medications [26]. In Sweden, a recent cross-sectional study in Stockholm analysed data from a pharmaceutical registry. It found that, of patients with a diagnosis of migraine and a high attack frequency (self-reported), and utilizing triptans for acute treatment, only 4% received preventative medication [27]. Some limitations of the study should be considered. First, Eurolight recruited from 10 EU countries with diverse sampling methods: some samples were population-based, others were general-practice-based and some were recruited through lay organisations [12]. A degree of interest-bias was very likely [17]. If this led to recruitment of more seriously affected patients, arguably our findings of under-treatment appear in even worse light. There was consistency in these findings, with more adequate medication among responders from lay groups, who were likely to be more vocal in their demands. Patients seeing specialists received better care than those treated by GPs, but important is that medical care was insufficient in all groups. A second limitation was that the cross-sectional Eurolight survey, while observing variations between countries, could not enquire into the reasons for under-treatment [12] (which might include differences in costs, health-seeking behaviour, culture and tradition, and structure and accessibility of health-care systems). The last 10 years have been crucial in improving knowledge of the prevalence and impact of migraine, beginning in 2007 with a systemic review of the existing literature [28]. The gaps in knowledge revealed by this review have been progressively filled by population-based studies undertaken by the Global Campaign against Headache [9, 10, 29]. The GBD studies have ranked migraine as the sixth highest cause of disability worldwide, third in both men and women aged under 50 years [4, 5]. The Eurolight study found that nearly one fifth of males and over a quarter of females with migraine reported the loss of > 10% of productive days [17]. It also demonstrated that the burden of migraine was not confined to attacks: there was measurable interictal burden also [30]. The estimated financial costs to the EU are huge [6]. Migraine remains to a very large extent to be untreated despite all this, and despite that migraine is a very treatable disorder [7, 31, 32]. This is a failure of health care with major adverse health and economic consequences. While some access to a wider range of drugs is achieved by consulting GPs, and rather more by seeing headache specialists, this is emphatically not a call for everyone with migraine to see specialists. Rather, it is a plea to curtail the insouciance to which migraine appears condemned [8]. We identify four needs, largely to be met by education at multiple levels. First, people with migraine should learn, through public health-education programmes, that migraine is a neurobiological disease that can often be effectively treated with correct usage of OTC drugs [7, 31, 32]. Here, pharmacists can help, but otherwise people with migraine should consult a GP. Second, in order to relieve an otherwise insupportable load on specialists, health-care providers in general and GPs in particular need better knowledge of how to recognise, diagnose and treat migraine (along with the small number of other headache disorders that are of public-health importance) [18, 32]. Without this, the potential benefits of consulting GPs will be frustrated. This better knowledge will improve usage of available treatments, produce better outcomes, avoid wastage [33] and, importantly, reduce overall costs [7]. Third, headache services need to be structured, so that they might be delivered countrywide, efficiently and equitably to the very large number of people who stand to benefit from them [7, 18]. And fourth, and most important, is the urgent need for political recognition not only that the problem exists but also that it demands remedial action [3, 5, 7]. The alternative is that large numbers of people will remain without diagnosis or best treatment, with not much hope for change, their unmitigated personal disability burdens translating into lost productivity with reduced societal output reflected in gross domestic product. The drive to produce new drugs and devices for headache [34, 35] offers little apparent utility if, when developed, they will not reach most patients [36]. The choice between these alternatives – invest in headache services, or do nothing – is, surely, not a difficult decision.

Conclusion

In wealthy European countries, too few people with migraine consult physicians, with proportionately too many of these seeing specialists, and migraine-specific medications are used inadequately even among those who do. These findings represent yet another call for action in Europe to improve care for people with headache. Education of both health-care providers and the public should be central to this action.
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1.  Lifting the burden: The global campaign against headache.

Authors:  T J Steiner
Journal:  Lancet Neurol       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 44.182

Review 2.  The global burden of headache: a documentation of headache prevalence and disability worldwide.

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Journal:  Cephalalgia       Date:  2007-03       Impact factor: 6.292

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Journal:  Eur J Neurol       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 6.089

Review 4.  Ibuprofen with or without an antiemetic for acute migraine headaches in adults.

Authors:  Roy Rabbie; Sheena Derry; R Andrew Moore
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2013-04-30

Review 5.  Lifting The Burden: the global campaign to reduce the burden of headache worldwide.

Authors:  Timothy J Steiner
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2005-09-21       Impact factor: 7.277

6.  The Global Campaign, World Health Organization and Lifting The Burden: collaboration in action.

Authors:  Timothy J Steiner; Gretchen L Birbeck; Rigmor Jensen; Zaza Katsarava; Paolo Martelletti; Lars Jacob Stovner
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2011-04-22       Impact factor: 7.277

7.  The Eurolight project: the impact of primary headache disorders in Europe. Description of methods.

Authors:  C Andrée; L J Stovner; T J Steiner; J Barré; Z Katsarava; J M Lainez; M Lanteri-Minet; G Mick; D Rastenyte; E Ruiz de la Torre; C Tassorelli; P Vriezen; C Lampl
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2011-06-10       Impact factor: 7.277

8.  Prevalence of primary headaches in Germany: results of the German Headache Consortium Study.

Authors:  M-S Yoon; Z Katsarava; M Obermann; G Fritsche; M Oezyurt; K Kaesewinkel; A Katsarova; I Santowski; H Diener; S Moebus
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2012-03-07       Impact factor: 7.277

9.  Years lived with disability (YLDs) for 1160 sequelae of 289 diseases and injuries 1990-2010: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010.

Authors:  Theo Vos; Abraham D Flaxman; Mohsen Naghavi; Rafael Lozano; Catherine Michaud; Majid Ezzati; Kenji Shibuya; Joshua A Salomon; Safa Abdalla; Victor Aboyans; Jerry Abraham; Ilana Ackerman; Rakesh Aggarwal; Stephanie Y Ahn; Mohammed K Ali; Miriam Alvarado; H Ross Anderson; Laurie M Anderson; Kathryn G Andrews; Charles Atkinson; Larry M Baddour; Adil N Bahalim; Suzanne Barker-Collo; Lope H Barrero; David H Bartels; Maria-Gloria Basáñez; Amanda Baxter; Michelle L Bell; Emelia J Benjamin; Derrick Bennett; Eduardo Bernabé; Kavi Bhalla; Bishal Bhandari; Boris Bikbov; Aref Bin Abdulhak; Gretchen Birbeck; James A Black; Hannah Blencowe; Jed D Blore; Fiona Blyth; Ian Bolliger; Audrey Bonaventure; Soufiane Boufous; Rupert Bourne; Michel Boussinesq; Tasanee Braithwaite; Carol Brayne; Lisa Bridgett; Simon Brooker; Peter Brooks; Traolach S Brugha; Claire Bryan-Hancock; Chiara Bucello; Rachelle Buchbinder; Geoffrey Buckle; Christine M Budke; Michael Burch; Peter Burney; Roy Burstein; Bianca Calabria; Benjamin Campbell; Charles E Canter; Hélène Carabin; Jonathan Carapetis; Loreto Carmona; Claudia Cella; Fiona Charlson; Honglei Chen; Andrew Tai-Ann Cheng; David Chou; Sumeet S Chugh; Luc E Coffeng; Steven D Colan; Samantha Colquhoun; K Ellicott Colson; John Condon; Myles D Connor; Leslie T Cooper; Matthew Corriere; Monica Cortinovis; Karen Courville de Vaccaro; William Couser; Benjamin C Cowie; Michael H Criqui; Marita Cross; Kaustubh C Dabhadkar; Manu Dahiya; Nabila Dahodwala; James Damsere-Derry; Goodarz Danaei; Adrian Davis; Diego De Leo; Louisa Degenhardt; Robert Dellavalle; Allyne Delossantos; Julie Denenberg; Sarah Derrett; Don C Des Jarlais; Samath D Dharmaratne; Mukesh Dherani; Cesar Diaz-Torne; Helen Dolk; E Ray Dorsey; Tim Driscoll; Herbert Duber; Beth Ebel; Karen Edmond; Alexis Elbaz; Suad Eltahir Ali; Holly Erskine; Patricia J Erwin; Patricia Espindola; Stalin E Ewoigbokhan; Farshad Farzadfar; Valery Feigin; David T Felson; Alize Ferrari; Cleusa P Ferri; Eric M Fèvre; Mariel M Finucane; Seth Flaxman; Louise Flood; Kyle Foreman; Mohammad H Forouzanfar; Francis Gerry R Fowkes; Richard Franklin; Marlene Fransen; Michael K Freeman; Belinda J Gabbe; Sherine E Gabriel; Emmanuela Gakidou; Hammad A Ganatra; Bianca Garcia; Flavio Gaspari; Richard F Gillum; Gerhard Gmel; Richard Gosselin; Rebecca Grainger; Justina Groeger; Francis Guillemin; David Gunnell; Ramyani Gupta; Juanita Haagsma; Holly Hagan; Yara A Halasa; Wayne Hall; Diana Haring; Josep Maria Haro; James E Harrison; Rasmus Havmoeller; Roderick J Hay; Hideki Higashi; Catherine Hill; Bruno Hoen; Howard Hoffman; Peter J Hotez; Damian Hoy; John J Huang; Sydney E Ibeanusi; Kathryn H Jacobsen; Spencer L James; Deborah Jarvis; Rashmi Jasrasaria; Sudha Jayaraman; Nicole Johns; Jost B Jonas; Ganesan Karthikeyan; Nicholas Kassebaum; Norito Kawakami; Andre Keren; Jon-Paul Khoo; Charles H King; Lisa Marie Knowlton; Olive Kobusingye; Adofo Koranteng; Rita Krishnamurthi; Ratilal Lalloo; Laura L Laslett; Tim Lathlean; Janet L Leasher; Yong Yi Lee; James Leigh; Stephen S Lim; Elizabeth Limb; John Kent Lin; Michael Lipnick; Steven E Lipshultz; Wei Liu; Maria Loane; Summer Lockett Ohno; Ronan Lyons; Jixiang Ma; Jacqueline Mabweijano; Michael F MacIntyre; Reza Malekzadeh; Leslie Mallinger; Sivabalan Manivannan; Wagner Marcenes; Lyn March; David J Margolis; Guy B Marks; Robin Marks; Akira Matsumori; Richard Matzopoulos; Bongani M Mayosi; John H McAnulty; Mary M McDermott; Neil McGill; John McGrath; Maria Elena Medina-Mora; Michele Meltzer; George A Mensah; Tony R Merriman; Ana-Claire Meyer; Valeria Miglioli; Matthew Miller; Ted R Miller; Philip B Mitchell; Ana Olga Mocumbi; Terrie E Moffitt; Ali A Mokdad; Lorenzo Monasta; Marcella Montico; Maziar Moradi-Lakeh; Andrew Moran; Lidia Morawska; Rintaro Mori; Michele E Murdoch; Michael K Mwaniki; Kovin Naidoo; M Nathan Nair; Luigi Naldi; K M Venkat Narayan; Paul K Nelson; Robert G Nelson; Michael C Nevitt; Charles R Newton; Sandra Nolte; Paul Norman; Rosana Norman; Martin O'Donnell; Simon O'Hanlon; Casey Olives; Saad B Omer; Katrina Ortblad; Richard Osborne; Doruk Ozgediz; Andrew Page; Bishnu Pahari; Jeyaraj Durai Pandian; Andrea Panozo Rivero; Scott B Patten; Neil Pearce; Rogelio Perez Padilla; Fernando Perez-Ruiz; Norberto Perico; Konrad Pesudovs; David Phillips; Michael R Phillips; Kelsey Pierce; Sébastien Pion; Guilherme V Polanczyk; Suzanne Polinder; C Arden Pope; Svetlana Popova; Esteban Porrini; Farshad Pourmalek; Martin Prince; Rachel L Pullan; Kapa D Ramaiah; Dharani Ranganathan; Homie Razavi; Mathilda Regan; Jürgen T Rehm; David B Rein; Guiseppe Remuzzi; Kathryn Richardson; Frederick P Rivara; Thomas Roberts; Carolyn Robinson; Felipe Rodriguez De Leòn; Luca Ronfani; Robin Room; Lisa C Rosenfeld; Lesley Rushton; Ralph L Sacco; Sukanta Saha; Uchechukwu Sampson; Lidia Sanchez-Riera; Ella Sanman; David C Schwebel; James Graham Scott; Maria Segui-Gomez; Saeid Shahraz; Donald S Shepard; Hwashin Shin; Rupak Shivakoti; David Singh; Gitanjali M Singh; Jasvinder A Singh; Jessica Singleton; David A Sleet; Karen Sliwa; Emma Smith; Jennifer L Smith; Nicolas J C Stapelberg; Andrew Steer; Timothy Steiner; Wilma A Stolk; Lars Jacob Stovner; Christopher Sudfeld; Sana Syed; Giorgio Tamburlini; Mohammad Tavakkoli; Hugh R Taylor; Jennifer A Taylor; William J Taylor; Bernadette Thomas; W Murray Thomson; George D Thurston; Imad M Tleyjeh; Marcello Tonelli; Jeffrey A Towbin; Thomas Truelsen; Miltiadis K Tsilimbaris; Clotilde Ubeda; Eduardo A Undurraga; Marieke J van der Werf; Jim van Os; Monica S Vavilala; N Venketasubramanian; Mengru Wang; Wenzhi Wang; Kerrianne Watt; David J Weatherall; Martin A Weinstock; Robert Weintraub; Marc G Weisskopf; Myrna M Weissman; Richard A White; Harvey Whiteford; Steven T Wiersma; James D Wilkinson; Hywel C Williams; Sean R M Williams; Emma Witt; Frederick Wolfe; Anthony D Woolf; Sarah Wulf; Pon-Hsiu Yeh; Anita K M Zaidi; Zhi-Jie Zheng; David Zonies; Alan D Lopez; Christopher J L Murray; Mohammad A AlMazroa; Ziad A Memish
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2012-12-15       Impact factor: 79.321

10.  The impact of headache in Europe: principal results of the Eurolight project.

Authors:  Timothy J Steiner; Lars Jacob Stovner; Zaza Katsarava; Jose Miguel Lainez; Christian Lampl; Michel Lantéri-Minet; Daiva Rastenyte; Elena Ruiz de la Torre; Cristina Tassorelli; Jessica Barré; Colette Andrée
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2014-05-21       Impact factor: 7.277

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  45 in total

1.  The disease burden of migraine patients receiving prophylactic treatments in Korea: a population-based claims database analysis.

Authors:  Seonyoung Park; Sola Han; Hae Sun Suh
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-07-12       Impact factor: 2.908

2.  Persistence, use of resources and costs in patients under migraine preventive treatment: the PERSEC study.

Authors:  Pablo Irimia; David García-Azorín; Mercedes Núñez; Sílvia Díaz-Cerezo; Pepa García de Polavieja; Tommaso Panni; Aram Sicras-Navarro; Antoni Sicras-Mainar; Antonio Ciudad
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2022-07-07       Impact factor: 8.588

3.  Burden of migraine and unmet needs from the patients' perspective: a survey across 11 specialized headache clinics in Korea.

Authors:  Byung-Kun Kim; Min Kyung Chu; Soo Jin Yu; Grazia Dell'Agnello; Jeong Hee Han; Soo-Jin Cho
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2021-05-24       Impact factor: 7.277

Review 4.  Pain in Women: A Perspective Review on a Relevant Clinical Issue that Deserves Prioritization.

Authors:  Roberto Casale; Fabiola Atzeni; Laura Bazzichi; Giovanna Beretta; Elisabetta Costantini; Paola Sacerdote; Cristina Tassorelli
Journal:  Pain Ther       Date:  2021-03-15

5.  Migraine is first cause of disability in under 50s: will health politicians now take notice?

Authors:  Timothy J Steiner; Lars J Stovner; Theo Vos; R Jensen; Z Katsarava
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2018-02-21       Impact factor: 7.277

6.  Polypharmacy Among Headache Patients: A Cross-Sectional Study.

Authors:  Anna Ferrari; Carlo Baraldi; Manuela Licata; Cecilia Rustichelli
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2018-06       Impact factor: 5.749

7.  Validation of an algorithm for automated classification of migraine and tension-type headache attacks in an electronic headache diary.

Authors:  Aaron Roesch; Markus A Dahlem; Lars Neeb; Tobias Kurth
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2020-06-12       Impact factor: 7.277

8.  Impact of migraine on workplace productivity and monetary loss: a study of employees in banking sector in Malaysia.

Authors:  Li Ping Wong; Haridah Alias; Nirmala Bhoo-Pathy; Ivy Chung; Yew Ching Chong; Sonesh Kalra; Zia U Bahkt Sultan Shah
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2020-06-08       Impact factor: 7.277

9.  Patient-Reported Outcomes for Migraine in the US and Europe: Burden Associated with Multiple Preventive Treatment Failures.

Authors:  Janet Ford; Russell M Nichols; Wenyu Ye; Antje Tockhorn-Heidenreich; Sarah Cotton; James Jackson
Journal:  Clinicoecon Outcomes Res       Date:  2021-07-14

10.  Structured headache services as the solution to the ill-health burden of headache: 1. Rationale and description

Authors:  Timothy J Steiner; Rigmor Jensen; Zaza Katsarava; Lars Jacob Stovner; Derya Uluduz; Latifa Adarmouch; Mohammed Al Jumah; Ali M Al Khathaami; Messoud Ashina; Mark Braschinsky; Susan Broner; Jon H Eliasson; Raquel Gil-Gouveia; Juan B Gómez-Galván; Larus S Gudmundsson; Akbar A Herekar; Nfwama Kawatu; Najib Kissani; Girish Baburao Kulkarni; Elena R Lebedeva; Matilde Leonardi; Mattias Linde; Otgonbayar Luvsannorov; Youssoufa Maiga; Ivan Milanov; Dimos D Mitsikostas; Teymur Musayev; Jes Olesen; Vera Osipova; Koen Paemeleire; Mario F P Peres; Guiovanna Quispe; Girish N Rao; Ajay Risal; Elena Ruiz de la Torre; Deanna Saylor; Mansoureh Togha; Sheng-Yuan Yu; Mehila Zebenigus; Yared Zenebe Zewde; Jasna Zidverc-Trajković; Michela Tinelli
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2021-07-21       Impact factor: 7.277

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