How Does Migraine Change After 10 Years? A Clinical Cohort Follow‐Up Analysis

Objective To describe the 10‐year evolution of a cohort of migraine patients, focusing on prognostic factors of improvement. Background Migraine is one of the most prevalent and disabling diseases and migraineurs often want to know about the evolutionary timeline of their condition. Yet, data from l...

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Veröffentlicht in:Headache 2020-05, Vol.60 (5), p.916-928
Hauptverfasser: Caronna, Edoardo, Gallardo, Victor José, Fonseca, Elena, Gómez‐Galván, Juan Bernardo, Alpuente, Alicia, Torres‐Ferrus, Marta, Pozo‐Rosich, Patricia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective To describe the 10‐year evolution of a cohort of migraine patients, focusing on prognostic factors of improvement. Background Migraine is one of the most prevalent and disabling diseases and migraineurs often want to know about the evolutionary timeline of their condition. Yet, data from longitudinal studies with a long‐term follow‐up is scarce. Methods This is a 10‐year longitudinal study. In 2008, we recruited 1109 consecutive migraine patients who answered an initial survey. In 2018, we did a follow‐up. We compared initial and final (after 10 years) data. A reduction ≥50% in Headache days/month was considered as improvement. A comparative study was carried out to identify predictors of improvement or no improvement. Results After 10 years, 380 patients completed the survey (34.3% of the initial cohort), 77.1% (293/380) were women; mean age 41.0 ± 10.6 years and 73.7% (280/380) had an initial diagnosis of episodic migraine (EM). After 10 years, 48.2% (183/380) of patients did not have a medical follow‐up of their migraine; 47.4% (180/380) decreased ≥50% in frequency, which increased the proportion of EM (73.7% vs 87.4%) (P 10 days/month (OR[95%]: 3.04 [1.89, 4.89]; P 
ISSN:0017-8748
1526-4610
DOI:10.1111/head.13774