| Literature DB >> 33789668 |
Oreste Affatato1, Thiago C Moulin2, Claudia Pisanu2,3, Victoria S Babasieva2,4, Marco Russo5, Elif I Aydinlar6, Paola Torelli7, Vladimir N Chubarev4, Vadim V Tarasov4,8, Helgi B Schiöth2,8, Jessica Mwinyi2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Migraine and depression are highly prevalent and partly overlapping disorders that cause strong limitations in daily life. Patients tend to respond poorly to the therapies available for these diseases. OnabotulinumtoxinA has been proven to be an effective treatment for both migraine and depression. While many studies have addressed the effect of onabotulinumtoxinA in migraine or depression separately, a growing body of evidence suggests beneficial effects also for patients comorbid with migraine and depression. The current meta-analysis systematically investigates to what extent onabotulinumtoxinA is efficient in migraineurs with depression.Entities:
Keywords: Botox; Depression; Meta-analysis; Migraine; OnabotulinumtoxinA
Year: 2021 PMID: 33789668 PMCID: PMC8011097 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-021-02801-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses flow diagram [12] for the selection of the references
Summary of the key epidemiological characteristics of the studies selected
| Reference | Country | Total patients (% of women) | Mean age (SD) | Scale assessing depression | Scale assessing migraine |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maasumi et al. [ | USA | 359 (86.1%) | 45.1 (13.2) | PHQ-9 | HIT6 |
| Boudreau et al. [ | Canada | 32 (87.5%) | 42.4 (12.4) | PHQ-9, BDI-II | HIT6, MIDAS, VAS |
| Kollewe et al. [ | Germany | 27 (92.3%) | 45.6 (10.8) | BDI | HIT6 |
| Russo et al. [ | Italy | 52 (88.5%) | 48.7 (12.9) | BDI-II | MIDAS |
| Demiryurek et al. [ | Turkey | 60 (73.3%) | 34.7 (6.4) | BDI | MIDAS, VAS |
| Guerzoni et al. [ | Italy | 57 (80.7%) | 54.2 (13) | Zung-D | HIT6, VAS |
| Aydinlar et al. [ | Turkey | 190 (87.9%) | 39.3 (10.2) | DASS-21 | MIDAS |
| Blumenfeld et al. [ | USA | 715 (84.8%) | 43.0 (11.3) | PHQ-9 | None |
Fig. 2Forest plot of the subgroup analysis assessing the reduction in the depressive symptoms. We reported the mean reduction in BDI scores after 3 months of treatment and in BDI-II and PHQ-9 scores after 6 months of treatment
Fig. 3Forest plot of the subgroup analysis assessing the reduction in the migraine symptoms. We reported the mean reduction in HIT6, MIDAS, VAS scores and the mean reduction in migraine frequency (i.e. number of headache attacks per month) after 6 months of treatment
Fig. 4Comparison of the treatment efficacy with onabotulinumtoxinA in patients monomorbid with migraine or depression and patients co-morbid with both disorders. Data of the patients showing only migraine or depression were extracted from the meta-analyses [5, 6, 11, 17]. Data of comorbid patients were calculated based on the studies [18–25]. Comparisons were conducted on patients who have been treated with onabotulinumtoxinA over 3 (BDI and MIDAS) or 6 months (HIT6, VAS and migraine frequency)