| Literature DB >> 31805851 |
Takao Takeshima1, Qi Wan2, Yanlei Zhang3, Mika Komori4, Serina Stretton5, Narayan Rajan6, Tamas Treuer7, Kaname Ueda8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The objective of this review was to determine the unmet needs for migraine in East Asian adults and children.Entities:
Keywords: Burden; China; Cost of illness; Epidemiology; Far East; Hong Kong; Japan; Korea; Medical economics; Migraine disorders; Prevalence; Quality of life; Taiwan
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31805851 PMCID: PMC6896325 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-019-1062-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Fig. 1Publication flow Note: publications were excluded for 1 reason but may have met > 1 exclusion criterion; most included publications reported outcomes for ≥2 topics.
Fig. 2Publications reporting peak prevalence (A) by age groups and (B) by country. Data in (A) were derived as follows: children [31, 36, 40], adults [20, 23, 27, 29, 43, 56], and elderly adults [30, 45]. Note, because of the age groups enrolled in each study, there was overlap in populations among the children, adult, and elderly adult categories. The prevalence of migraine in children aged 16–18 years from Roh et al. 2012 (14.2%) [58] is not included because of the overlap in age with adults. Data in (B) were derived as follows: China [20, 27, 29, 43], Japan [51, 53], and South Korea [56]. Roh et al. 1998 [59] used a non-standard definition of migraine for adults in South Korea and is not reported in panels A or B
Fig. 3Number of studies reporting humanistic burden, economic burden, and clinical management of migraine. The size of the circle and numeral denotes the number of publications reporting each outcome; publications could be counted more than once. For burden, health-related quality of life (HRQoL) includes general health instruments, migraine-related quality of life (MRQoL) includes the Migraine Disability Assessment Questionnaire and Headache Impact Test-6, and Other includes various measures including bedrest, aspects of daily living, and school absence. Studies reporting prevalence only are not reported here
Studies reporting humanistic burden of migraine
| Citation | Country/ | Study design | Migraine criteria | Migraine (n) | Main findings for participants with migraine |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yu, 2012 [ | China / Mainland | Population-based 2009 | ICHD-II | 469 Mean 46.2 y 67.6 F | World Health Organization QoL-8 (migraine [ • Total score 25.7 vs 27.9 • Life quality 3.2 vs 3.4 • Health level 3.0 vs 3.6 • Daily life ability 3.4 vs 3.7 • Satisfied with yourself 3.5 vs 3.7 • Interpersonal relationships 3.8 vs 3.9 • Habitation condition 3.3 vs 3.5 • Daily life energy 3.0 vs 3.4 • Payment ability 2.6 vs 2.8 |
| Wang, 2016 [ | China / Mainland | Population-based 2013 | ID Migraine Screener – Chinese version | 102 Mean 51.5 y 84.3 F | HRQoL (SF-36) was significantly worse for respondents with migraine than those without. Domains significantly different (linear regression, • Role physical −25.8 mean difference • Role emotional − 17.1 • General health − 13.0 • Bodily pain − 10.9 • Physical functioning − 3.8 |
| Hung, 2006 [ | China / Taiwan | Cross-sectional-other: headache clinic 2003–2004 | ICHD-II | 281 adults Mean 35.3 y 20–50 y 77.6 F | MIDAS-T Mean score: 34.2 ± 45.9 (severe disability) • Days missed from work/school 4.6 ± 9.9 • Reduced effectiveness days at work/school 8.2 ± 12.2 • Days missed from housework 7.1 ± 14.0 • Reduced effectiveness in housework 8.0 ± 12.1 • Days missed from family, social, or leisure activities 6.5 ± 13.9 |
| Wang, 2013 [ | China / Taiwan | Cross-sectional other: headache clinics 2011 | Neurologist diagnosis / ICHD-II | 331 adults Mean, 41 77.7 F | MIDAS scores for chronic migraine vs episodic migraine: • 46.1 ± 49.2 (grade IV–B) vs EM: 14.4 ± 23.4 (grade III), • % MIDAS with very severe disability: 41.3% vs 7.9% MSQ for chronic migraine vs episodic migraine: • Role function restrictive (56.4 ± 17.3 vs 70.8 ± 13.8, • Role function preventive (70.0 ± 18.2 vs 81.4 ± 16.2, • Emotional function scores (62.0 ± 23.0 vs 78.1 ± 16.8, EQ-5D VAS chronic migraine vs episodic migraine: • 67.4 ± 18.7 vs 82.3 ± NR, |
| Wang, 2001 [ | China / Taiwan | Cross-sectional other: headache clinic 1998–1999 | IHS | 193 adults Mean 41.8 y 80 F | Compared with SF-36 normative data (0–100) for Taiwanese women, migraine had the greatest effect on bodily pain and role emotional: • Role physical 77.6 vs 56.0 • Bodily pain 79.4 vs 49.7 • General health 63.3 vs 49.5 • Vitality 65.3 vs 50.9 • Social functioning 85.3 vs 67.9 • Role emotional 79.9 vs 54.2 • Mental health 71.8 vs 61.6 |
| Sakai, 1997 [ | Japan | Population-based NR | IHS | 338 adults ≥15 y 79.0 F | 74.2% had significant impairment in daily living (not defined): • Disability in social activity: severe (4.5%), moderate (27.5%), mild/none (68.0%) • Daily activity impairment: required bedrest always (4%), frequently required bedrest with severely impaired daily activity (30%), moderate impairment of daily activity (40%), minor impairment (21%), no impairment (5%) |
| Iigaya, 2003 [ | Japan | Cross-sectional other: headache clinics 2000 | IHS | 99 patients with migraine and or TTH (72% had at least migraine) Mean 42.7 y 80.8 F | 46.5% of patients were MIDAS grade I or II (minimal, mild, or infrequent disability), 22.2% were MIDAS grade III (moderate disability), and 31.3% were MIDAS grade IV (severe disability) |
| Roh, 1998 [ | South Korea | Population-based 1996 | IHS | 272 adults ≥15 y 24.3 F | 19.1% discontinued daily activities because of migraine 34.4% canceled work or social activities because of migraine |
| Kim, 2012; Kim, 2013; Chu, 2013 [ | South Korea | Population-based 2009 | ICHD-II | 92 adults ≥19 y NR | Mean HIT-6 scores: 51.9 for women and 51.8 for men • Little or no impact, 42.8%–42.9% • Some impact, 25.3%–25.7% • Substantial impact, 13.0%–13.2% • Severe impact, 18.5%–18.7% Over the past 3 mo, patients with migraine experienced: • Restriction in activities for a mean of 2.7 days • Missing activities for a mean of 2.8 days |
| Adolescents/children | |||||
| Lu, 2000 [ | China / Taiwan | Population-based 1998–1999 | IHS | 277 adolescents 13–15 y 58.8 F | 30.4% of children with migraine were absent from school because of headache in the previous semester: 1–3 days 27%, ≥4 days 3.4% |
| Goto, 2017 [ | Japan | Population-based 2012 | IHS | 131 adolescents 6–12 y: 42.5 F 12–15 y: 67.2 F | Feeling fed up or irritated, having difficulty concentrating were significantly more common ( For children with migraine, the number of days for the past 3 mo that disability affected school life, including school absences, arriving late, leaving early, or having difficulty participating in physical activities, ranged from 1.7 (SD 1.2) days to 3.8 (SD 3.7) days |
EQ-5D European Quality of Life 5–Dimensions questionnaire; F female; HIT-6 Headache Impact Test; HRQoL health-related quality of life; ICHD-I/II/IIIβ International Classification of Headache Disorders; IHS International Headache Society; MSQ Migraine-Specific Quality-of-Life Questionnaire; MIDAS Migraine Disability Assessment Questionnaire; NR not reported; SD standard deviation; SF-36 Short-Form 36-item survey; TTH tension-type headache; VAS visual analog scale
Studies reporting economic burden of migraine
| Citation | Country/ | Study design | Migraine criteria | Migraine (n) | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yu, 2012 [ | China / Mainland | Population-based 2009 | ICHD-II | 469 respondents Mean 46.2 y 67.6 F | Over the past 3 mo, average (SD): • Days of missed work 2.7 (7.5) • Impaired work days 4.0 (8.1) • Missed housework days 3.3 (7.1) • Impaired housework days 4.7 (8.6) Indirect costs due to migraine-related lost productivity: CNY 273.7 billion (USD 39.4 billion) Direct costs (diagnosis / treatment out-of-pocket expenses) per person affected year: CNY 729 Direct costs per year CNY 58.0 billion (USD 8.4 billion) Total annual cost of migraine per year: CNY 331.7 billion (USD 47.8 billion) |
| Fuh, 2008 [ | China / Taiwan | Population-based 1997–1998 | IHS migraine and modified migraine (IHS and attacks 2- to 4-h duration) | 1813 employees NR 43.2 F 1809 non-employees NR NR | Over the past 1 y: • Median no. of missed days/employee, 2 days • Estimated median cost due to missed workdays/person in subjects with migraine vs without migraine: NTD 1667 vs NTD 0, Projected annual number of missed workdays and economic loss attributed to migraine in 2005: • 3.7 million missed workdays/y (3.06 million in women, 0.64 million in men) • Estimated annual cost of migraine was NTD 4873/person • Estimated cost of NTD 4.6 billion/y due to lost workdays • Women accounted for ~ 80% of total cost (~ 56% of total cost attributed to women aged 35–54 y) |
| Tang, 2013 [ | China / Taiwan | Cross-sectional other: retrospective case-control analysis of NHIRD 1996–2009 | Refractory migraine (ICD-9-CM) | 936 patients with refractory migraine vs 3743 non-migraine controls Mean 42 y 76 F 673 patients with refractory migraine vs 2202 with other migraine Mean age 41–42 y 79–80 F | All analyses adjusted for age, gender, urbanization level, income, and comorbidities Refractory migraine vs non-migraine adjusted for sociodemographic factors/comorbidity, mean (SD) Frequency of care: • Outpatient visits: 35.5 (33.2) vs 16.5 (14.4), • Emergency visits: 1.2 (1.3) vs 0.3 (0.3), • Hospital admission: 0.7 (0.8) vs 0.3 (0.3), • Hospital days: 7.1 (11.5) vs 2.4 (4.7), Annual total drug costs per person: NTD 19,752 (USD 608) vs NTD 8660 (USD 266), Annual total medical costs per person: NTD 57,932 (USD 1783) vs NTD 26,817 (USD 825), Refractory migraine vs other migraine adjusted for sociodemographic factors/comorbidity, mean (SD) Frequency of care: • Outpatient visits: 36.3 (23.0) vs 26.2 (12.3), • Emergency visits: 1.4 (1.6) vs 0.5 (0.5), • Hospital admission: 0.6 (0.8) vs 0.3 (0.3), • Hospital days 7.0 (10.9) vs 2.7 (5.1), Annual total drug costs per person: NTD 17,623 (USD 542) vs NTD 10,088 (USD 310), Annual total medical costs per person: NTD 54,678 (USD 1682) vs NTD 38,397 (USD 1181), |
| Takeshima, 2004 [ | Japan | Population-based 1999 | IHS | 342 adults ≥20 y 81.6 F | Over the past 3 mo: • 20.3% had time off work due to headache • 25.8% with MWA had time off work (mean no. of days: 1.8) • 19.5% with MOA had time off work (mean no. of days: 3.8) • 27.3% with MWA were unable to do housework (mean no. of days: 2.0) • 28.0% with MOA were unable to do housework (mean no. of days: 2.8) |
| Suzuki, 2014 [ | Japan | Community-based 2007–2008 | ICHD-II | 704 Tokyo employees ≥20 y 77.4 F | 25.1% had to miss work because of headache 2.7% could not work once per mo |
| Choi, 2018 [ | South Korea | Cross-sectional other: prospective disease registry 2016–2018 | ICHD-IIIβ | 38a adults Mean, 37.6 y 15.7 F | Employed patients with migraine compared with employed control patients without headache: • Experienced difficulty at work (63.9% vs 36.5%) • Had low productivity (33.3% vs 11.5%) • Greater sick leave (13.9% vs 3.8%) Migraine or TTH was significantly associated with difficulties at work after adjustment for health, anxiety, and stress (OR 3.05; 95% CI, 1.10–8.49; |
a This study enrolled 143 patients with cluster headache, 38 age- and sex-matched patients with migraine or TTH, which included 5 patients had chronic migraine, 25 with episodic migraine, and 8 with TTH (4 chronic and 4 episodic), and 52 individuals without headache. Patients with cluster headache are not reported here
CI confidence interval; CNY Chinese yen; F female; ICHD-I/II/IIIβ International Classification of Headache Disorders; IHS International Headache Society; MOA migraine without aura; MWA migraine with aura; NHIRD Taiwan National National Health Insurance Database; NR not reported; NTD New Taiwanese dollar; OR odds ratio; SD standard deviation; TTH tension-type headache; USD United States dollar
Studies reporting clinical management of migraine
| Citation | Country/region | Study design | Migraine criteria | Population (n) | Main findings for participants with migraine |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wang, 2011 and Li, 2012 [ | China / Mainland | Cross-sectional other: neurological outpatient department 2010 | ICHD-II | 401 patients with migraine | Practice pattern over the past 1 y: • 68.6% of patients had consulted a physician, 13.5% were diagnosed with migraine, 37.2% had not received any diagnosis Treatment over the past 3 mo: • 43.1% had not used analgesics for migraine, 11.7% were using analgesics ≥3 days/wk., none had used triptans, 2.7% had used preventive drugs |
| Liu, 2013 [ | China / Mainland | Population-based 2009 | ICHD-II | 452 adults with migraine | Practice pattern over the past 1 y: • 52.9% of adults had consulted a physician for headache • 52.7% of adults who had a consultation for headache were undiagnosed • 13.8% were diagnosed with migraine, the remaining were diagnosed with other headache disorders Significant predictors of consultation for migraine were mild, moderate, or severe disability (HALT index) vs minimal HALT (0–5 days lost/3 mo): • Mild 6–10 days lost: adjusted OR 3.4 (95% CI, 1.6–7.4) • Moderate 11–20 days lost: adjusted OR 2.5 (95% CI, 1.2–5.4) • Severe > 20 days lost: adjusted OR 3.9 (95% CI, 1.9–8.1) |
| Lu, 2001 [ | China / Taiwan | Population-based 1997–1998 | > 15 headache days/mo for > 1 mo; > 4-h duration | 108 adults with chronic daily headache | Practice pattern and treatment over the past 1 y: • 57% had consulted a physician for their headache • 41% consulted their family physician, 28% neurologist • 5% were treated with preventive drugs |
| Wang, 2000; Wang, 2001 [ | China / Taiwan | Population-based 1997–1998 | IHS migraine and modified migraine (IHS + attacks of 2- to 4-h duration) | 328 adults with migraine | Practice pattern over the past 1 y: • 54% had consulted a physician for the headache • 18% of these had been diagnosed with migraine by their physician Treating physicians • 29% general practitioners • 17% internists, 14% ENT specialists, 12% neurologists • 4.9% gynecologists, 4.6% ophthalmologists, 1.2% allergists, 2.7% other |
| Lu, 2006 [ | China / Taiwan | Cross-sectional other: neurologists in Taiwan NR | NA | 123 neurologists in Taiwan | 31.7% of patients seen were outpatients with migraine Attitudes: • 88.5% reported headache to be an important part of their practice • 40.2% thought headache patients to be time-consuming • 86.9% reported patient satisfaction as an important consideration for treatment • 89.9% thought behavioral therapy to be an important part of treatment Treatment: • 69.9% agreed that preventive medication was indicated for ≥2 migraine attacks/wk., but 12.2% prescribed preventives for patients with ≥14 headaches/mo • Most commonly prescribed drugs were beta-blockers (96.7%), flunarizine (87.0%), tricyclic antidepressants (80.5%), and valproic acid (54.5%) • 32.5% had never prescribed triptans, mostly because of cost (35%) |
| Wang, 2008 [ | China / Taiwan | Cross-sectional other: neurological clinics 2005 | ICHD-II (MOA, MWA, probable) | 755 patients with headache attending a neurology clinic for the first time | 60% were diagnosed by neurologists with migraine 48% had MWA or MOA (ICHD-II) 71% had any migraine type (ICHD-II) of these, 23% were not diagnosed by neurologists as having migraine 57.4% diagnosed with any migraine (ICHD-II) had never been diagnosed with migraine previously |
| Wang, 2013 [ | China / Taiwan | Cross-sectional other: headache clinics 2011 | Neurologist diagnosis / ICHD-II | 331 adults with migraine at neurology clinics | Over the past 3 mo for chronic migraine vs episodic migraine Health care professional evaluation of headache: 85.6% vs 81.7% • General practitioner: 34.3% vs 24.6% • Neurologist/specialist: 79.0% vs 80.6% • Emergency room visits: 21.0% vs 5.5% • Hospital admission: 4.8% vs 0% • Preventive medication: 48.5% vs 31.7% |
| Sakai, 1997 [ | Japan | Population-based NR | IHS migraine and modified migraine (IHS + attacks of 2- to 4-h duration) | 338 adults with IHS-defined or other defined migraine | 69.4% had never consulted a physician for headache 11.6% were aware their headache was migraine 56.8% were taking OTC drugs 5.4% were taking prescription drugs 18.6% were taking OTC and prescription drugs 19.2% were not taking any medication |
| Takeshima, 2004 [ | Japan | Population-based 1999 | IHS | Adults 41 with MWA 301 with MOA | MWA vs MOA Most never consulted a physician for migraine 61.0% vs 71.8% Few continuously consulted a physician for migraine 7.3% vs 5.3% Main reasons for not consulting or not continuing to consult a physician: • Headache not severe enough 35.7% vs 29.3%; 38.5% vs 30.4% • Will improve spontaneously after standing 57.1% vs 56.9%; 30.8% vs 27.5% • OTC medication effective 21.4% vs 53.7%; 23.1% vs 30.4% |
| Kotani, 2004 [ | Japan | Cross-sectional: other NR | IHS | 35 patients with migraine at a general health clinic | Main reasons for not previously seeking medical attention: • 28.6% can endure symptoms without medication • 28.6% OTC medication is effective • 28.6% could not miss work • 25.7% could sleep and wake pain-free |
| Suzuki, 2014 [ | Japan | Community-based 2007–2008 | ICHD-II | 704 employees in Tokyo | 1.3% regularly visited their physicians 59.4% had never consulted with a physician about their headaches The most common reasons ( |
| Roh, 1998 [ | South Korea | Population-based 1996 | IHS | 272 adults with migraine | 64.3% used medication for their migraine 92.8% used OTC medication 24.4% had consulted a physician for headache |
| Children/adolescents | |||||
| Lu, 2000 [ | China/ Taiwan | Population-based 1998–1999 | IHS | Children 13–15 y, 277 | 72.1% of children used painkillers for their headache 11.5% used painkillers ≥1 d/wk |
| Goto, 2017 [ | Japan | Population-based 2012 | ICHD-IIIβ (unilateral aura not included) | Children 6–12 y, 48 12–15 y, 37 | Elementary school and junior high school students who reported disability due to migraine: • 44.9% and 47.9% had not had a medical consultation for their migraine • 30.6% and 8.3% had not received prescription medication for their migraine |
CI confidence interval; F female; HALT Headache-Attributed Lost Time Index; ICHD-I/II/IIIβ International Classification of Headache Disorders; ICD-9-CM International Classification of Diseases, 9th revision, Clinical Modification; IHS International Headache Society; NA not applicable; NR not reported; MOA migraine without aura; MWA migraine with aura; OTC over-the-counter; OR odds ratio; SD standard deviation