Division of Neurology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Headache. 2019 Apr;59(4):543-555. doi: 10.1111/head.13477. Epub 2019 Jan 23.
To characterize the short-term prognosis of a clinical population of pediatric and young adult patients with migraine and explore predictors of clinical worsening while in care.
This was a retrospective study of all migraine patients seen at the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Headache Center from 09/01/2006 to 12/31/2017, who had at least 1 follow-up visit within 1-3 months of the index visit analyzed. Included data were: age, sex, race, primary ICHD diagnosis, chronic migraine, medication overuse, history of status migrainosus, BMI percentile, headache frequency, headache severity, PedMIDAS score, allodynia, preventive treatment type, lifestyle habits, disease duration, depressive and anxiety symptoms. Clinical worsening was defined as an increase in 4 or more headache days per month between the index visit and the follow-up visit.
Data for 13,160 visit pairs (index and follow-up), from 5316 patients, were analyzed. Clinical worsening occurred in only 14.5% (1908/13,160), whereas a reduction in headache frequency was observed in 56.8% of visit intervals (7475/13,160), with 34.8% of the intervals (4580/13,160) showing a reduction of 50% or greater. The change in headache frequency was minimal (increase in 0-3 headaches/month) in 28.7% of intervals (3737/13,160). In the multivariable model, the odds of worsening were significantly higher with increasing age, female sex, chronic migraine, status migrainosus, depressive symptoms, higher PedMIDAS scores, and use of nutraceuticals, whereas the odds of worsening were lower for summer visits, caffeine drinkers, higher headache frequencies, and use of pharmaceuticals.
The majority of pediatric patients who receive multimodal interdisciplinary care for migraine improve over time. Our findings highlight a set of clinical features that may help in identifying specific factors that may contribute to an unfavorable short-term prognosis.
描述儿科和青年偏头痛患者临床人群的短期预后,并探讨在治疗过程中临床恶化的预测因素。
这是一项回顾性研究,纳入了 2006 年 9 月 1 日至 2017 年 12 月 31 日期间在辛辛那提儿童医院头痛中心就诊的所有偏头痛患者,这些患者在就诊后 1-3 个月内至少有一次随访。纳入的数据包括:年龄、性别、种族、原发性 ICHD 诊断、慢性偏头痛、药物过度使用、偏头痛持续状态史、BMI 百分位数、头痛频率、头痛严重程度、PedMIDAS 评分、感觉异常、预防治疗类型、生活方式习惯、疾病持续时间、抑郁和焦虑症状。临床恶化定义为在就诊和随访之间,每月头痛天数增加 4 天或以上。
分析了来自 5316 名患者的 13160 对就诊(就诊和随访)的数据。只有 14.5%(1908/13160)发生临床恶化,而 56.8%(7475/13160)的就诊间隔头痛频率降低,其中 34.8%(4580/13160)的间隔头痛频率降低 50%或更多。28.7%(3737/13160)的间隔头痛频率变化极小(增加 0-3 次/月)。在多变量模型中,年龄、女性、慢性偏头痛、偏头痛持续状态、抑郁症状、较高的 PedMIDAS 评分和使用营养保健品与恶化的几率显著增加,而夏季就诊、咖啡因饮用者、较高的头痛频率和药物使用与恶化的几率降低。
大多数接受偏头痛多模式跨学科治疗的儿科患者随着时间的推移会有所改善。我们的研究结果突出了一组临床特征,这些特征可能有助于识别特定的可能导致不良短期预后的因素。