Literature DB >> 29468450

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

Timothy J Steiner1,2, Lars J Stovner3,4, Theo Vos5, R Jensen6, Z Katsarava7,8.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Keywords:  Burden of disease; Disability; Global Burden of Disease study; Global Campaign against Headache; Headache disorders; Medication-overuse headache; Migraine; Public health; Tension-type headache

Year:  2018        PMID: 29468450      PMCID: PMC5821623          DOI: 10.1186/s10194-018-0846-2

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


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If it were needed, more evidence of the disconcerting under-treatment of headache disorders has come from the Eurolight study [1]. The topic is not new. Twenty years ago, the International and American Headache Societies jointly voiced their dismay at the inadequacies of health care for headache [2]. In 2006, the European Headache Federation and World Headache Alliance described migraine as a “forgotten epidemic” [3]. Meanwhile, in 2003, the Global Campaign against Headache [4-6] engaged the World Health Organization (WHO) as partner in this cause [7], embarking on a worldwide action programme which began by assessing the magnitude of headache in the world [4, 8]. In 2011, WHO’s global survey of headache disorders and resources, a Global Campaign project, laid bare the scale and scope of under-treated headache everywhere, and its consequences [9]. WHO wrote, in a message sent inter alia to the world’s Ministries of Health: “This first global enquiry into these matters illuminates the worldwide neglect of a major public-health problem, and reveals the inadequacies of responses to it in countries throughout the world” [9]. No words could be clearer but, to make sure, WHO repeated the message soon after [10]. Eurolight was a cross-sectional survey of over 8000 participants, conducted by multiple partners (scientific and lay) in 10 European countries [11]. A considerable strength of this study, apart from its size and geographical scope, was the use in all countries of the same questionnaire [12], a derivative of the HARDSHIP questionnaire already employed in many different countries, cultures and translations [13]. Also a strength was its scope of enquiry, simultaneously into migraine, tension-type headache (TTH) and medication-overuse headache (MOH), the three headache disorders of major public-health importance. This provided a broad view of headache in Europe. The different sampling methods employed by the countries in Eurolight produced samples that varied in their representativeness of the general population, arguably a strength in that it brought data into the survey from diversely-sourced samples [11, 12]. The new report analyses Eurolight data for indicators of adequacy of medical care [1]. The focus is on migraine, and the findings are depressing. Among 1175 participants in the 10 countries reporting frequent migraine – on more than five days per month, indicating unambiguous need for preventative medication – fewer than 20% had seen a health-care professional (general practitioner [GP] or specialist). In most countries, fewer than 10% were receiving what might be considered adequate acute treatment, and even smaller proportions had the preventative medication for which they were clearly eligible. Participants who had managed to make contact with specialists generally received better care by these indicators, which might be expected. Those seeing GPs were less well served, and those entirely dependent on self-medication – the large majority – fared poorly. In other words, the authors conclude, in wealthy Europe, too few people with migraine consult physicians, and migraine-specific medications are used inadequately even among those who do [1]. Is there hope at all for people with headache in less well-resourced countries? The Eurolight report comes soon after publication of the latest (2016) Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study [14]. “The most comprehensive worldwide observational epidemiological study to date” [15], GBD has been performed reiteratively since 1990, with estimates of health loss due to disease a principal objective [16]. Its findings, informing national health policies, offer a rational basis for priority setting and resource-allocation, driving service organisation and delivery to meet assessed needs. GBD now revises its estimates annually as it continuously develops and refines the methodology of disease-burden estimation and its expression as premature mortality (years of life lost: YLLs) and disability (years lived with disability: YLDs). At the same time, updated estimates take account of new epidemiological evidence as it continues to become available. Since migraine was first included in GBD, it has ascended the ranks of top causes of YLDs worldwide, from its debut at 19th in GBD 2000 [17] to seventh in GBD 2010 [18, 19] and sixth in GBD 2013 [20, 21]. This persistent rise is not indicative of increasing prevalence: it follows the collection and assimilation into GBD of ever better data as new population-based studies have slowly filled the large knowledge gaps, which as recently as 2007 related to more than half the world’s population [22]. With better knowledge, empirical data have replaced many of the assumptions underlying the earlier GBD estimates, and, as YLD calculations became prevalence-based rather than reliant on the less-easily ascertained incidence and duration, estimates have gained in reliability. In GBD 2015, migraine dropped back to seventh among causes of YLDs, partly because of revised estimates for other disorders, but, being notably age-related, it was third in both males and females aged 15–49 [23]. GBD 2016 offers sobering findings for those affected by or who care about migraine [14]. At level two of GBD’s disease hierarchy, neurological disorders collectively account for 8.6% of all YLDs in the world, and come fourth in the disability ranking (behind mental and substance use, “other non-communicable” and musculoskeletal disorders). At level three, headache disorders are the cause of more than three quarters of all neurological YLDs (6.5% of all YLDs), despite that neurological disorders include epilepsy, Alzheimer disease and other dementias, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis and motor neuron disease. At level four, migraine now takes second place, responsible for 5.6% of all YLDs in the world, behind only low back pain (7.2%) (Table 1).
Table 1

Top 10 level-4 causes of disability in GBD 2016 (global, both sexes, all ages)

Low back pain
Migraine
Age-related hearing loss
Iron-deficiency anaemia
Major depression
Neck pain
Other musculoskeletal disorders
Diabetes
Anxiety disorders
Falls
Top 10 level-4 causes of disability in GBD 2016 (global, both sexes, all ages) There is worse. In the age group 15–49 years, migraine is the top cause of YLDs [14] (Table 2). Let us not forget that these are the productive years, when education is completed, families formed, children raised, careers built and prospects for the whole remainder of life established. Whatever impact migraine-attributed disability may have more generally, during these years it is greatly magnified.
Table 2

GBD 2016: Years lived with disability (YLDs) attributed to migraine by gender, age and region (from [14])

RegionGenderAge range (years)% of total YLDs(95% CI)Rank
GlobalBothAll15–495.6 (4.0–7.2)8.2 (6.0–10.6)21
MAll15–494.3 (3.1–5.5)6.4 (4.6–8.2)32
FAll15–496.8 (4.9–8.8)9.8 (7.1–12.7)21
North AmericaBothAll4.8 (3.5–6.1)5
Latin America and Caribbean6.7 (4.9–8.6)2
Western Europe6.2 (4.5–7.9)2
Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia6.0 (4.4–7.7)3
South Asia6.5 (4.6–8.5)2
SE and East Asia and Oceania4.6 (3.3–6.0)4
North Africa and Middle East6.7 (5.0–8.6)2
Sub-Saharan Africa4.6 (3.2–6.1)3
GBD 2016: Years lived with disability (YLDs) attributed to migraine by gender, age and region (from [14]) There is a ready explanation for the apparently steep rise in migraine since GBD 2015, conducted a year earlier: it lies with MOH. GBD 2015 regarded MOH as a separate disease [23]. While MOH is relatively uncommon (prevalence estimates vary around the world but are mostly in the range 1.5–3% [24, 25]), it is highly disabling, by definition characterised by headache on 15 or more days per month [26]. GBD 2015 placed it 18th among the causes of YLDs [23]. Nosologically, MOH is undoubtedly a distinct disease [26], but aetiologically it is a complication arising from mistreatment of other headache disorders, principally migraine and to a lesser extent TTH: it does not occur otherwise [26]. In GBD 2016, the decision was made that burden attributed to MOH would be more correctly attributed to the antecedent disorders, in due proportion (73.4% to migraine, 26.6% to TTH, from a meta-analysis of three studies [27-29]). Not everybody may agree with this, but there is both logic and purpose in recognising MOH as one of the sequelae (health states) of the antecedent headache disorder. In GBD terms, therefore, migraine is associated with three potential health states, each occurring with measurable probability (established in population-based studies): the ictal state (during an attack, with its symptoms), the interictal state (between recurrent attacks), and MOH. All three contribute to the disability burden of migraine, and all three contributions should be duly recognised. (We noted earlier that GBD does not consider disability associated with the interictal state of headache disorders [21], although significant interictal burden is reported by many people with migraine [30]). From GBD 2016 it is more evident than ever that headache disorders have a very large detrimental effect on public health. Table 2 shows that migraine is a major contributor to disability throughout the world, in both high- and low-income countries [14]. It is worth noting that, of the 21 regions into which GBD divides the world, five are still without any data on headache and more have only scarce data. Furthermore, most data are from adults, with relatively few studies reporting on children and adolescents. Nevertheless, headache disorders are, manifestly, an egregious cause of health loss. Why, then, when efficacious and cost-effective treatments exist [31, 32], do health services almost everywhere leave them side-lined [9, 10, 33]? Will health politicians finally take notice, now that migraine is top of the heap? Looking forward, and not to end on an impliedly negative note, we remind researchers that further population-based studies are needed to fill the remaining knowledge gaps. Quality in these is all-important: published methodological guidelines [34] and instruments [13] are available, and surveys should follow and adopt these. Ultimately, if studies contributing to GBD are standardized, future iterations of GBD may not only show the relative importance of headache in global public health but also monitor the benefits of improvements in headache care, new treatments and societal change.
  27 in total

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.  Definitions of medication-overuse headache in population-based studies and their implications on prevalence estimates: a systematic review.

Authors:  Maria L Westergaard; Ebba Holme Hansen; Charlotte Glümer; Jes Olesen; Rigmor H Jensen
Journal:  Cephalalgia       Date:  2013-11-29       Impact factor: 6.292

3.  Can we know the prevalence of MOH?

Authors:  Tj Steiner
Journal:  Cephalalgia       Date:  2014-02-05       Impact factor: 6.292

4.  Epidemiology of medication overuse headache in the general Swedish population.

Authors:  Pernilla Jonsson; Tove Hedenrud; Mattias Linde
Journal:  Cephalalgia       Date:  2011-05-31       Impact factor: 6.292

Review 5.  The global burden of headache: a documentation of headache prevalence and disability worldwide.

Authors:  Lj Stovner; K Hagen; R Jensen; Z Katsarava; Rb Lipton; Ai Scher; Tj Steiner; J-A Zwart
Journal:  Cephalalgia       Date:  2007-03       Impact factor: 6.292

Review 6.  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

7.  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

8.  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

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; 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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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  109 in total

1.  Dural Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide Produces Female-Specific Responses in Rodent Migraine Models.

Authors:  Amanda Avona; Carolina Burgos-Vega; Michael D Burton; Armen N Akopian; Theodore J Price; Gregory Dussor
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2019-04-08       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Levetiracetam as preventive treatment in adults with migraine: an up-to-date systematic review and quantitative meta-analysis.

Authors:  Georgia Tsaousi; Chryssa Pourzitaki; Spyridon Siafis; Athanassios Kyrgidis; Vasilios Grosomanidis; Dimitrios Kouvelas; Georgios Papazisis
Journal:  Eur J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2019-11-25       Impact factor: 2.953

Review 3.  Tailoring Treatment in Polymorbid Migraine Patients through Personalized Medicine.

Authors:  Leda Marina Pomes; Giovanna Gentile; Maurizio Simmaco; Marina Borro; Paolo Martelletti
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2018-06       Impact factor: 5.749

4.  Fruit and vegetable consumption in relation to primary headaches: the MEPHASOUS study.

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Journal:  Eat Weight Disord       Date:  2020-08-12       Impact factor: 4.652

5.  Medication-overuse headache: painkillers are not always the answer.

Authors:  Benjamin R Wakerley
Journal:  Br J Gen Pract       Date:  2020-01-30       Impact factor: 5.386

6.  The association between dietary tryptophan intake and migraine.

Authors:  Soodeh Razeghi Jahromi; Mansoureh Togha; Zeinab Ghorbani; Azita Hekmatdoost; Faezeh Khorsha; Pegah Rafiee; Pedram Shirani; Morvarid Nourmohammadi; Hossein Ansari
Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2019-06-28       Impact factor: 3.307

7.  Vitamin D in migraine headache: a comprehensive review on literature.

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Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2019-08-03       Impact factor: 3.307

Review 8.  Co-occurrence of pain syndromes.

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Journal:  J Neural Transm (Vienna)       Date:  2019-11-29       Impact factor: 3.575

9.  The Study of Pain in Rats and Mice.

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Review 10.  Current Evidence on Potential Uses of MicroRNA Biomarkers for Migraine: From Diagnosis to Treatment.

Authors:  Parisa Gazerani
Journal:  Mol Diagn Ther       Date:  2019-12       Impact factor: 4.074

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