Department of Neurological Sciences, University of Vermont, Burlington.
Cerner Enviza, San Mateo, CA.
J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2023 Feb;29(2):197-209. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2023.29.2.197.
Migraine is the second most common cause of disability worldwide. Understanding the relationship between migraine and employment status is critical for policymakers, as disability-related unemployment is associated with eligibility for private or governmental disability insurance payments and other associated support for those unable to work because of disability. To assess the association between migraine frequency and selfreported employment status and overall disability in a US representative survey. Using data from the 2019 National Health and Wellness Survey (NHWS) (Kantar Health), adults in the United States (aged 18-65 years) reporting at least 1 migraine day in the past 30 days were categorized by headache frequency: low-frequency episodic migraine (LFEM) (≤4 days/month), moderate-frequency EM (MFEM) (5-9 days/month), high-frequency EM (HFEM) (10-14 days/month), or chronic migraine (CM) (≥15 days/month). A control group of adults without migraine with similar baseline characteristics was identified by propensity score matching. Disability-related unemployment was defined as participants responding "short-term disability" or "long-term disability" to occupational status on the NHWS. The frequency of short- or long-term disability was then evaluated across headache frequency groups. In addition, participants were asked to assess migraine-related disability via the Migraine Disability questionnaire (MIDAS). A total of 1,962 respondents with LFEM, 987 with MFEM, 554 with HFEM, and 926 with CM were included in this analysis, along with 4,429 matched controls. Headache frequency was associated both with increased MIDAS score and with employment disability ( < 0.001); 12.3% (n = 114 of 926) of participants with CM reported employment disability, as did 4.4% (n = 86 of 1,962) of the LFEM group and 6.9% (n = 306 of 4,429) of matched controls. There was considerable discordance between the proportion of participants classified as disabled via MIDAS vs those reporting employment-related disability. More frequent migraine headaches are associated with a higher likelihood of self-reported short- and long-term employment disability and overall migraine-related disability, suggesting that health and economic policymakers must seek ways to maximize the employment opportunities for people living with migraine that may benefit from novel preventive treatments. Robert E Shapiro is a research consultant for Eli Lilly and Lundbeck. Ashley A Martin and Martine C Maculaitis are employees of Cerner Enviza (formerly Kantar Health), which received payment from Lundbeck to conduct the research. Shiven Bhardwaj was an employee of Lundbeck at the time of study and manuscript development. Heather Thomson and Carlton Anderson are employees of Lundbeck. Steven M Kymes is an employee and stockholder of Lundbeck. Financial support for research conducted and manuscript preparation was provided by Lundbeck.
偏头痛是全球第二大致残原因。了解偏头痛与就业状况之间的关系对政策制定者至关重要,因为与残疾相关的失业与私人或政府残疾保险金的资格以及其他为因残疾无法工作的人提供的相关支持有关。评估偏头痛频率与美国代表性调查中的自我报告就业状况和整体残疾之间的关系。利用坎特健康公司 2019 年国家健康与健康调查(NHWS)的数据,报告过去 30 天内至少有 1 天偏头痛的美国成年人(18-65 岁)按头痛频率分类:低频率发作性偏头痛(LFEM)(≤4 天/月)、中度频率 EM(MFEM)(5-9 天/月)、高频率 EM(HFEM)(10-14 天/月)或慢性偏头痛(CM)(≥15 天/月)。通过倾向评分匹配,确定了具有类似基线特征的无偏头痛成人对照组。与职业状况相关的残疾性失业定义为 NHWS 上的参与者回答“短期残疾”或“长期残疾”。然后评估头痛频率组之间短期或长期残疾的频率。此外,参与者被要求通过偏头痛残疾问卷(MIDAS)评估偏头痛相关残疾。共有 1962 名 LFEM 患者、987 名 MFEM 患者、554 名 HFEM 患者和 926 名 CM 患者以及 4429 名匹配对照者纳入本分析。头痛频率与 MIDAS 评分升高和就业残疾相关(<0.001);12.3%(926 名参与者中的 114 名)的 CM 参与者报告就业残疾,LFEM 组为 4.4%(1962 名参与者中的 86 名),匹配对照组为 6.9%(4429 名参与者中的 306 名)。通过 MIDAS 分类为残疾的参与者比例与报告与就业相关残疾的参与者比例之间存在很大差异。更频繁的偏头痛与自我报告的短期和长期就业残疾以及整体偏头痛相关残疾的可能性更高,这表明卫生和经济政策制定者必须寻求方法,为可能受益于新型预防治疗的偏头痛患者最大限度地创造就业机会。罗伯特·E·夏皮罗(Robert E Shapiro)是礼来和灵北的研究顾问。阿什利·A·马丁(Ashley A Martin)和马丁·C·马库里蒂斯(Martine C Maculaitis)是坎特恩扎(前身为康德健康)的员工,该公司从灵北获得了进行这项研究的报酬。Shiven Bhardwaj 是 Lundbeck 的员工,负责研究和手稿的开发。Heather Thomson 和 Carlton Anderson 是 Lundbeck 的员工。Steven M Kymes 是 Lundbeck 的员工和股东。由 Lundbeck 提供资金支持进行研究和准备手稿。