| Literature DB >> 31072307 |
Robert Cowan1, Joshua M Cohen2, Erik Rosenman3, Ravi Iyer2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adherence to a therapy, though a key factor for successful treatment, is low among patients with chronic conditions such as migraine. Dose frequency plays a major role in adherence. This study evaluated the impact of having flexible dosing options on acceptance of and adherence to a new migraine preventive therapy class among adults with migraine.Entities:
Keywords: CGRP antibody; Dosing flexibility; Dosing preference; Migraine prevention; Monthly dosing; Quarterly dosing; Therapy adherence
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31072307 PMCID: PMC6734424 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-019-0998-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Demographics and baseline characteristics of survey participants (physicians)
| Physicians ( | |
|---|---|
| Age, years, mean (range) | 49 (23–74) |
| Women, % | 75 |
| Ethnicity, % | |
| White/Caucasian | 67 |
| Asian/Pacific Islander | 24 |
| Hispanic/Latino | 3 |
| Black/African American | 3 |
| Years in practice, year | 16.5 |
| Patient volume, number of patients per month | |
| Adult patients | 379 |
| Adult patient with migraine | 84 |
| Patient type, % | |
| CM (≥15 headache days/month) | 20 |
| High-frequency EM (10–14 headache days/month) | 23 |
| Moderate-frequency EM (5–9 headache days/month) | 30 |
| Patient insurance, % | |
| Private/commercial | 53 |
| Medicare Part D | 24 |
| Medicaid | 8 |
| ACA | 8 |
| VA/TRICARE | 4 |
| Practice setting, % | |
| Office-based | 87 |
| Hospital-based | 13 |
ACA, Affordable Care Act; CM, chronic migraine; EM, episodic migraine; VA Veterans Affairs
Demographics and baseline characteristics of survey participants (patients with migraine)
| Migraine Patients ( | |
|---|---|
| Age, years, mean (range) | 45 (18–86) |
| Women, % | 78 |
| Ethnicity, % | |
| White/Caucasian | 88 |
| Hispanic/Latino | 8 |
| Black/African American | 5 |
| Education level, % | |
| At least college | 54 |
| High school | 9 |
| Employment status, % | |
| Employed full-time | 57 |
| Homemaker | 13 |
| Retired | 11 |
| Annual household income before taxes ≥$75,000 in 2017, % | 43 |
| Insurance, % | |
| Private/commercial | 82 |
| Medicare Part D | 11 |
| ACA | 4 |
| VA/TRICARE | 3 |
| Residence, % | |
| Suburban | 54 |
| Rural | 23 |
| Urban/city | 23 |
| Migraine frequency, n (%) | |
| CM (≥15 headache days/month) | 86 (21) |
| High-frequency EM (10–14 headache days/month) | 103 (25) |
| Moderate-frequency EM (5–9 headache days/month) | 228 (55) |
ACA, Affordable Care Act; CM, chronic migraine; EM, episodic migraine; VA, Veterans Affairs
Fig. 1Reasons physicians choose to prescribe monthly dosing
Fig. 2Reasons physicians choose to prescribe quarterly dosing
Fig. 3Proportion of patients expected by physicians to receive the new medication when only monthly, only quarterly or both dosing options are available
Fig. 4Patients preference: Monthly dosing, quarterly dosing, or on preference
Fig. 5Main reasons patients prefer monthly or quarterly dosing
Fig. 6Likelihood of acceptance of and adherence to the new medication based on dosing preference and availability