Powers Scott W, Coffey Christopher S, Chamberlin Leigh A, Ecklund Dixie J, Klingner Elizabeth A, Yankey Jon W, Peugh James L, Korbee Leslie L, Simmons Kerry, Sullivan Stephanie M, Kabbouche Marielle A, Kacperski Joanne, Porter Linda L, Reidy Brooke L, Hershey Andrew D
Division of Behavioral Medicine and Clinical Psychology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Cincinnati Children's Headache Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
JAMA Netw Open. 2021 Jul 1;4(7):e2114712. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.14712.
Migraine is a common neurological disease that often begins in childhood and continues into adulthood; approximately 6 million children and adolescents in the United States cope with migraine, and many frequently experience significant disability and multiple headache days per week. Although pharmacological preventive treatments have been shown to offer some benefit to youth with migraine, additional research is needed to understand whether and how these benefits are sustained.
To survey clinical status of youth with migraine who participated in the 24-week Childhood and Adolescent Migraine Prevention (CHAMP) trial over a 3-year follow-up period.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This survey study used internet-based surveys collected from youth ages 8 to 17 years at 3, 6, 12, 18, 24, and 36 months after completion of the CHAMP trial, which randomized participants to amitriptyline, topiramate, or placebo. At the end of the trial, the study drug was stopped, and participants received clinical care of their choice thereafter. The CHAMP trial was conducted between May 2012 and November 2015, and survey follow-up was conducted June 2013 to June 2018. Participants in this survey study were representative of those randomized in the trial. Data were analyzed from March 2020 to April 2021.
Survey completion.
Headache days, disability (assessed using the Pediatric Migraine Disability Scale [PedMIDAS]), and self-report of ongoing use of prescription preventive medication.
A total of 205 youth (mean [SD] age, 14.2 [2.3] years; 139 [68%] girls; mean [SD] history of migraine, 5.7 [3.1] years) participated in the survey. Retention of participants was 189 participants (92%) at month 6, 182 participants (88%) at month 12, 163 participants (80%) at month 18, 165 participants (80%) at month 24, and 155 participants (76%) at month 36. Over the course of the 3-year follow-up, participants consistently maintained meaningful reductions in headache days (mean [SD] headache days per 28 days: CHAMP baseline, 11.1 [6.0] days; CHAMP completion, 5.0 [5.7] days; 3-year follow-up, 6.1 [6.1] days) and disability (mean [SD] score: CHAMP baseline, 40.9 [26.4]; CHAMP completion, 17.9 [22.1]; 3-year follow-up, 12.3 [20.0]). At 3 years after completion of the CHAMP trial, headache days were approximately 1.5 per week (changed from about 3 per week at trial baseline) and disability had improved from the moderate range to the low mild range on the PedMIDAS. Longitudinal analyses showed that amitriptyline and topiramate did not explain intercept random effects for either mean rate of headache days per week (amitriptyline: estimate [SE], 0.07 [0.05]; P = .16; topiramate: estimate [SE], 0.04 [0.05]; P = .50) or headache disability PedMIDAS total score (amitriptyline: estimate [SE], 0.25 [0.38]; P = .52; topiramate: estimate [SE], -0.09 [0.39]; P = .82) changes over time. Of 153 participants who reported on prescription drug use at 3 years, only 1 participant (1%) reported using prevention medication, and most participants reported no medication use at most time points.
These findings suggest that children and adolescents with longer than 5 years history of migraine who participated in the CHAMP trial may sustain positive clinical outcomes over time, even after discontinuing preventive pill-based treatment. This survey study could inform use and discontinuation timing of pharmacological preventive therapies for migraine in youth ages 8 to 17 years. Research is needed to examine mechanisms of treatment improvement and maintenance for preventive therapies, as well as placebo, in the pediatric population.
偏头痛是一种常见的神经系统疾病,通常始于儿童期并持续至成年期;美国约有600万儿童和青少年患有偏头痛,许多人经常出现严重的功能障碍,每周有多个头痛日。尽管药物预防性治疗已被证明对偏头痛青少年有一定益处,但仍需要更多研究来了解这些益处是否以及如何持续存在。
在3年的随访期内,对参与为期24周的儿童和青少年偏头痛预防(CHAMP)试验的偏头痛青少年的临床状况进行调查。
设计、背景和参与者:这项调查研究使用基于互联网的调查问卷,在CHAMP试验完成后的3、6、12、18、24和36个月,收集8至17岁青少年的数据。该试验将参与者随机分为接受阿米替林、托吡酯或安慰剂治疗。试验结束时,停用研究药物,此后参与者接受他们选择的临床护理。CHAMP试验于2012年5月至2015年11月进行,调查随访于2013年6月至2018年6月进行。本调查研究的参与者代表了试验中随机分组的人群。数据于2020年3月至2021年4月进行分析。
完成调查。
头痛天数、功能障碍(使用儿童偏头痛功能障碍量表[PedMIDAS]评估)以及正在使用处方预防性药物的自我报告。
共有205名青少年(平均[标准差]年龄,14.2[2.3]岁;139名[68%]为女孩;平均[标准差]偏头痛病史,5.7[3.