| Literature DB >> 35589944 |
Thomas Folkmann Hansen1,2, Mona Ameri Chalmer3, Astrid Olesen1, Henrik Winther Schytz1, Sisse Rye Ostrowski4,5, Mie Topholm6, Kaspar Nielsen7, Christian Erikstrup8, Susan Mikkelsen8, Ole Birger Pedersen5,9, Jes Olesen1.
Abstract
The real-world use of triptans in the treatment of migraine is disappointing. Only 12% of the Danish migraine population purchased a triptan between 2014 and 2019, and only 43% repurchased a triptan after first prescription. The aim of the present study was to assess whether physicians and patients adhere to the therapeutic guideline on acute migraine treatment. We interviewed 299 triptan experienced participants with migraine and 101 triptan naïve participants with migraine from the Danish Migraine Population Cohort, using a semi-structured questionnaire. Descriptive statistical analyses were used to study the association with triptan use and the assessed factors. Among triptan naïve participants with migraine, 64% had consulted their general practitioner about their migraine, of whom only 23% received information about the possibility of triptan treatment. Among triptan experienced participants, 77% had only tried one type of triptan. Only 12% could recall they had been informed by their general practitioner to try each triptan three times before giving up. Twenty percent were informed to try three different triptans in total, if the first did not work. In disagreement with the guideline, participants who reported a low pain reduction by a triptan had only tried one type of triptan. Our study shows a low adherence to therapeutic guideline for the attack treatment of migraine. There is a need for better education of general practitioners regarding treatment of migraine. Future campaigns should aim to inform both the public and the general practitioner about antimigraine treatments.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35589944 PMCID: PMC9120453 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-12545-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Inclusion of study participants from The Danish Migraine Population Cohort. Triptan naïve (N = 101) and triptan experienced (N = 299) participants were randomly recruited from the Danish Migraine Population Cohort.
Baseline characteristics of participants with migraine.
| Triptan | Naïve N | Experienced N |
|---|---|---|
| Total | 101 | 299 |
| Median age (IQR) | 44.9 (16.4) | 46.8 (18.5) |
| Women (%) | 62 (62%) | 234 (79%) |
| 0 | 54 | 95 |
| 1–3 | 42 | 137 |
| 4–7 | < 5 | 50 |
| 8 or more* | < 5 | 17 |
Baseline characteristics of triptan naïve and triptan experienced participants with migraine. According to the study protocol, results of number of participants between n = 0–4 must be indicated as n < 5. IQR inter-quartile range. *Defined as High Frequency Episodic Migraine.
Figure 2Flow chart of triptan naïve participants who had consulted their general practitioner regarding their migraine.
Effect of acute treatment for migraine attack two hours post intake.
| Triptan naïve N (%) | Triptan experienced N (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Increased to ≥ 50% | 85 (84) | 220 (74) |
| Significantly impaired or no effect at all | 16 (16) | 78 (26) |
| ≤ 50% | 75 (83) | 55 (18) |
| > 50% | 15 (17) | 243 (82) |
Effect of acute treatment other than triptan among triptan naïve participants and effect of triptans among triptan experienced participants.
Information received by the general practitioner (GP) among triptan experienced participants.
| Information about migraine and treatment received by GP | Yes N (%) | No N (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Migraine diagnosis | 291 (97) | 8 (3) |
| Migraine treatment | 292 (98) | 7 (2) |
| Treatment for recurrent migraine | 95 (73) | 35 (27) |
| Try the same triptan at least 3 times | 36 (12) | 263 (88) |
| Try three different types of triptan | 60 (20) | 239 (80) |
Information by the general practitioner (GP). Detailed questions about information received by the GP regarding diagnosis and the GP’s guidance regarding triptan treatment were only given triptan experienced participants. Moreover, the question regarding information about treatment for recurrent migraine, was only given to participants with recurrent migraine within 24 h (N = 130).
Distribution of the type of triptans experienced participants had tried.
| Triptan type | Sumatriptan | Rizatriptan | Eletriptan | Frovatriptan | Naratriptan | Zolmitriptan | n |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 184 | ||||||
| Yes | 31 | ||||||
| Yes | 15 | ||||||
| Yes | Yes | 40 | |||||
| Yes | Yes | 10 | |||||
| Yes | Yes | < 5 | |||||
| Yes | Yes | < 5 | |||||
| Yes | Yes | < 5 | |||||
| Yes | Yes | < 5 | |||||
| Yes | Yes | Yes | 9 | ||||
| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | < 5 | |||
List of available triptans that triptan experienced participants had tried. No participants had tried Almotriptan. According to the study protocol, results of number of participants between n = 0–4 must be indicated as n < 5.
Discontinuation of use of triptans among triptan experienced participants.
| Reported reasons | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Remission of migraine | 50 (43) |
| Marginal or no effect of triptans | 23 (20) |
| Adverse events | 13 (11) |
| Believed attacks were too mild | 12 (11) |
| Preferred other medication | 9 (8) |
| Aversion towards medicine in general | < 5 (< 5) |
Reasons for discontinuation of use of triptans.
N total = 115 of whom there were missing information on reason for triptan discontinuation on N = 6. According to the study protocol, results of number of participants between n = 0–4 must be indicated as n < 5.