Diagnosis, consultation, treatment, and impact of migraine in the US: Results of the OVERCOME (US) study
Objective The ObserVational survey of the Epidemiology, tReatment and Care of MigrainE (OVERCOME; United States) study is a multicohort, longitudinal web survey that assesses symptomatology, consulting, diagnosis, treatment, and impact of migraine in the United States. Background Regularly updating...
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Published in | Headache Vol. 62; no. 2; pp. 122 - 140 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
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United States
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
01.02.2022
John Wiley and Sons Inc |
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Abstract | Objective
The ObserVational survey of the Epidemiology, tReatment and Care of MigrainE (OVERCOME; United States) study is a multicohort, longitudinal web survey that assesses symptomatology, consulting, diagnosis, treatment, and impact of migraine in the United States.
Background
Regularly updating population‐based views of migraine in the United States provides a method for assessing the quality of ongoing migraine care and identifying unmet needs.
Methods
The OVERCOME (US) 2018 migraine cohort involved: (I) creating a demographically representative sample of US adults using quota sampling (n = 97,478), (II) identifying people with active migraine in the past year via a validated migraine diagnostic questionnaire and/or self‐reported medical diagnosis of migraine (n = 24,272), and (III) assessing consultation, diagnosis, and treatment of migraine (n = 21,143). The current manuscript evaluated whether those with low frequency episodic migraine (LFEM; 0–3 monthly headache days) differed from other categories on outcomes of interest.
Results
Among the migraine cohort (n = 21,143), 19,888 (94.1%) met our International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition‐based case definition of migraine and 12,905 (61.0%) self‐reported a medical diagnosis of migraine. Respondents’ mean (SD) age was 42.2 (15.0) years; 15,697 (74.2%) were women. Having at least moderate disability was common (n = 8965; 42.4%) and around half (n = 10,783; 51.0%) had consulted a medical professional for migraine care in the past year. Only 4792 (22.7%) of respondents were currently using a triptan. Overall, 8539 (40.4%) were eligible for migraine preventive medication and 3555 (16.8%) were currently using migraine preventive medication. Those with LFEM differed from moderate and high frequency episodic migraine and chronic migraine on nearly all measures of consulting, diagnosis, and treatment.
Conclusion
The OVERCOME (US) 2018 cohort revealed slow but steady progress in diagnosis and preventive treatment of migraine. However, despite significant impact among the population, many with migraine have unmet needs related to consulting for migraine, migraine diagnosis, and getting potentially beneficial migraine treatment. Moreover, it demonstrated the heterogeneity and varying unmet needs within episodic migraine. |
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AbstractList | Objective
The ObserVational survey of the Epidemiology, tReatment and Care of MigrainE (OVERCOME; United States) study is a multicohort, longitudinal web survey that assesses symptomatology, consulting, diagnosis, treatment, and impact of migraine in the United States.
Background
Regularly updating population‐based views of migraine in the United States provides a method for assessing the quality of ongoing migraine care and identifying unmet needs.
Methods
The OVERCOME (US) 2018 migraine cohort involved: (I) creating a demographically representative sample of US adults using quota sampling (n = 97,478), (II) identifying people with active migraine in the past year via a validated migraine diagnostic questionnaire and/or self‐reported medical diagnosis of migraine (n = 24,272), and (III) assessing consultation, diagnosis, and treatment of migraine (n = 21,143). The current manuscript evaluated whether those with low frequency episodic migraine (LFEM; 0–3 monthly headache days) differed from other categories on outcomes of interest.
Results
Among the migraine cohort (n = 21,143), 19,888 (94.1%) met our International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition‐based case definition of migraine and 12,905 (61.0%) self‐reported a medical diagnosis of migraine. Respondents’ mean (SD) age was 42.2 (15.0) years; 15,697 (74.2%) were women. Having at least moderate disability was common (n = 8965; 42.4%) and around half (n = 10,783; 51.0%) had consulted a medical professional for migraine care in the past year. Only 4792 (22.7%) of respondents were currently using a triptan. Overall, 8539 (40.4%) were eligible for migraine preventive medication and 3555 (16.8%) were currently using migraine preventive medication. Those with LFEM differed from moderate and high frequency episodic migraine and chronic migraine on nearly all measures of consulting, diagnosis, and treatment.
Conclusion
The OVERCOME (US) 2018 cohort revealed slow but steady progress in diagnosis and preventive treatment of migraine. However, despite significant impact among the population, many with migraine have unmet needs related to consulting for migraine, migraine diagnosis, and getting potentially beneficial migraine treatment. Moreover, it demonstrated the heterogeneity and varying unmet needs within episodic migraine. The ObserVational survey of the Epidemiology, tReatment and Care of MigrainE (OVERCOME; United States) study is a multicohort, longitudinal web survey that assesses symptomatology, consulting, diagnosis, treatment, and impact of migraine in the United States.OBJECTIVEThe ObserVational survey of the Epidemiology, tReatment and Care of MigrainE (OVERCOME; United States) study is a multicohort, longitudinal web survey that assesses symptomatology, consulting, diagnosis, treatment, and impact of migraine in the United States.Regularly updating population-based views of migraine in the United States provides a method for assessing the quality of ongoing migraine care and identifying unmet needs.BACKGROUNDRegularly updating population-based views of migraine in the United States provides a method for assessing the quality of ongoing migraine care and identifying unmet needs.The OVERCOME (US) 2018 migraine cohort involved: (I) creating a demographically representative sample of US adults using quota sampling (n = 97,478), (II) identifying people with active migraine in the past year via a validated migraine diagnostic questionnaire and/or self-reported medical diagnosis of migraine (n = 24,272), and (III) assessing consultation, diagnosis, and treatment of migraine (n = 21,143). The current manuscript evaluated whether those with low frequency episodic migraine (LFEM; 0-3 monthly headache days) differed from other categories on outcomes of interest.METHODSThe OVERCOME (US) 2018 migraine cohort involved: (I) creating a demographically representative sample of US adults using quota sampling (n = 97,478), (II) identifying people with active migraine in the past year via a validated migraine diagnostic questionnaire and/or self-reported medical diagnosis of migraine (n = 24,272), and (III) assessing consultation, diagnosis, and treatment of migraine (n = 21,143). The current manuscript evaluated whether those with low frequency episodic migraine (LFEM; 0-3 monthly headache days) differed from other categories on outcomes of interest.Among the migraine cohort (n = 21,143), 19,888 (94.1%) met our International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition-based case definition of migraine and 12,905 (61.0%) self-reported a medical diagnosis of migraine. Respondents' mean (SD) age was 42.2 (15.0) years; 15,697 (74.2%) were women. Having at least moderate disability was common (n = 8965; 42.4%) and around half (n = 10,783; 51.0%) had consulted a medical professional for migraine care in the past year. Only 4792 (22.7%) of respondents were currently using a triptan. Overall, 8539 (40.4%) were eligible for migraine preventive medication and 3555 (16.8%) were currently using migraine preventive medication. Those with LFEM differed from moderate and high frequency episodic migraine and chronic migraine on nearly all measures of consulting, diagnosis, and treatment.RESULTSAmong the migraine cohort (n = 21,143), 19,888 (94.1%) met our International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition-based case definition of migraine and 12,905 (61.0%) self-reported a medical diagnosis of migraine. Respondents' mean (SD) age was 42.2 (15.0) years; 15,697 (74.2%) were women. Having at least moderate disability was common (n = 8965; 42.4%) and around half (n = 10,783; 51.0%) had consulted a medical professional for migraine care in the past year. Only 4792 (22.7%) of respondents were currently using a triptan. Overall, 8539 (40.4%) were eligible for migraine preventive medication and 3555 (16.8%) were currently using migraine preventive medication. Those with LFEM differed from moderate and high frequency episodic migraine and chronic migraine on nearly all measures of consulting, diagnosis, and treatment.The OVERCOME (US) 2018 cohort revealed slow but steady progress in diagnosis and preventive treatment of migraine. However, despite significant impact among the population, many with migraine have unmet needs related to consulting for migraine, migraine diagnosis, and getting potentially beneficial migraine treatment. Moreover, it demonstrated the heterogeneity and varying unmet needs within episodic migraine.CONCLUSIONThe OVERCOME (US) 2018 cohort revealed slow but steady progress in diagnosis and preventive treatment of migraine. However, despite significant impact among the population, many with migraine have unmet needs related to consulting for migraine, migraine diagnosis, and getting potentially beneficial migraine treatment. Moreover, it demonstrated the heterogeneity and varying unmet needs within episodic migraine. The ObserVational survey of the Epidemiology, tReatment and Care of MigrainE (OVERCOME; United States) study is a multicohort, longitudinal web survey that assesses symptomatology, consulting, diagnosis, treatment, and impact of migraine in the United States. Regularly updating population-based views of migraine in the United States provides a method for assessing the quality of ongoing migraine care and identifying unmet needs. The OVERCOME (US) 2018 migraine cohort involved: (I) creating a demographically representative sample of US adults using quota sampling (n = 97,478), (II) identifying people with active migraine in the past year via a validated migraine diagnostic questionnaire and/or self-reported medical diagnosis of migraine (n = 24,272), and (III) assessing consultation, diagnosis, and treatment of migraine (n = 21,143). The current manuscript evaluated whether those with low frequency episodic migraine (LFEM; 0-3 monthly headache days) differed from other categories on outcomes of interest. Among the migraine cohort (n = 21,143), 19,888 (94.1%) met our International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition-based case definition of migraine and 12,905 (61.0%) self-reported a medical diagnosis of migraine. Respondents' mean (SD) age was 42.2 (15.0) years; 15,697 (74.2%) were women. Having at least moderate disability was common (n = 8965; 42.4%) and around half (n = 10,783; 51.0%) had consulted a medical professional for migraine care in the past year. Only 4792 (22.7%) of respondents were currently using a triptan. Overall, 8539 (40.4%) were eligible for migraine preventive medication and 3555 (16.8%) were currently using migraine preventive medication. Those with LFEM differed from moderate and high frequency episodic migraine and chronic migraine on nearly all measures of consulting, diagnosis, and treatment. The OVERCOME (US) 2018 cohort revealed slow but steady progress in diagnosis and preventive treatment of migraine. However, despite significant impact among the population, many with migraine have unmet needs related to consulting for migraine, migraine diagnosis, and getting potentially beneficial migraine treatment. Moreover, it demonstrated the heterogeneity and varying unmet needs within episodic migraine. ObjectiveThe ObserVational survey of the Epidemiology, tReatment and Care of MigrainE (OVERCOME; United States) study is a multicohort, longitudinal web survey that assesses symptomatology, consulting, diagnosis, treatment, and impact of migraine in the United States.BackgroundRegularly updating population‐based views of migraine in the United States provides a method for assessing the quality of ongoing migraine care and identifying unmet needs.MethodsThe OVERCOME (US) 2018 migraine cohort involved: (I) creating a demographically representative sample of US adults using quota sampling (n = 97,478), (II) identifying people with active migraine in the past year via a validated migraine diagnostic questionnaire and/or self‐reported medical diagnosis of migraine (n = 24,272), and (III) assessing consultation, diagnosis, and treatment of migraine (n = 21,143). The current manuscript evaluated whether those with low frequency episodic migraine (LFEM; 0–3 monthly headache days) differed from other categories on outcomes of interest.ResultsAmong the migraine cohort (n = 21,143), 19,888 (94.1%) met our International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition‐based case definition of migraine and 12,905 (61.0%) self‐reported a medical diagnosis of migraine. Respondents’ mean (SD) age was 42.2 (15.0) years; 15,697 (74.2%) were women. Having at least moderate disability was common (n = 8965; 42.4%) and around half (n = 10,783; 51.0%) had consulted a medical professional for migraine care in the past year. Only 4792 (22.7%) of respondents were currently using a triptan. Overall, 8539 (40.4%) were eligible for migraine preventive medication and 3555 (16.8%) were currently using migraine preventive medication. Those with LFEM differed from moderate and high frequency episodic migraine and chronic migraine on nearly all measures of consulting, diagnosis, and treatment.ConclusionThe OVERCOME (US) 2018 cohort revealed slow but steady progress in diagnosis and preventive treatment of migraine. However, despite significant impact among the population, many with migraine have unmet needs related to consulting for migraine, migraine diagnosis, and getting potentially beneficial migraine treatment. Moreover, it demonstrated the heterogeneity and varying unmet needs within episodic migraine. |
Author | Reed, Michael L. Lipton, Richard B. Araujo, Andre B. Nicholson, Robert A. Jaffe, Dena H. Ashina, Sait Buse, Dawn C. Rowland, John C. Faries, Douglas E. Shapiro, Robert E. Cambron‐Mellott, M. Janelle Pearlman, Eric M. |
AuthorAffiliation | 4 Kantar Tel Aviv Israel 6 Department of Neurology Harvard Medical School Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA 3 Vedanta Research Chapel Hill North Carolina USA 8 Kantar New York New York USA 1 Department of Neurology Albert Einstein College of Medicine Bronx New York USA 7 Department of Anesthesia Harvard Medical School Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA 5 Department of Neurological Sciences Larner College of Medicine University of Vermont Burlington Vermont USA 2 Eli Lilly and Company Indianapolis Indiana USA |
AuthorAffiliation_xml | – name: 8 Kantar New York New York USA – name: 4 Kantar Tel Aviv Israel – name: 1 Department of Neurology Albert Einstein College of Medicine Bronx New York USA – name: 3 Vedanta Research Chapel Hill North Carolina USA – name: 2 Eli Lilly and Company Indianapolis Indiana USA – name: 7 Department of Anesthesia Harvard Medical School Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA – name: 6 Department of Neurology Harvard Medical School Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA – name: 5 Department of Neurological Sciences Larner College of Medicine University of Vermont Burlington Vermont USA |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Richard B. surname: Lipton fullname: Lipton, Richard B. organization: Albert Einstein College of Medicine – sequence: 2 givenname: Robert A. orcidid: 0000-0002-2725-9739 surname: Nicholson fullname: Nicholson, Robert A. email: robert.nicholson@lilly.com organization: Eli Lilly and Company – sequence: 3 givenname: Michael L. surname: Reed fullname: Reed, Michael L. organization: Vedanta Research – sequence: 4 givenname: Andre B. surname: Araujo fullname: Araujo, Andre B. organization: Eli Lilly and Company – sequence: 5 givenname: Dena H. surname: Jaffe fullname: Jaffe, Dena H. organization: Kantar – sequence: 6 givenname: Douglas E. surname: Faries fullname: Faries, Douglas E. organization: Eli Lilly and Company – sequence: 7 givenname: Dawn C. surname: Buse fullname: Buse, Dawn C. organization: Albert Einstein College of Medicine – sequence: 8 givenname: Robert E. surname: Shapiro fullname: Shapiro, Robert E. organization: University of Vermont – sequence: 9 givenname: Sait surname: Ashina fullname: Ashina, Sait organization: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center – sequence: 10 givenname: M. Janelle surname: Cambron‐Mellott fullname: Cambron‐Mellott, M. Janelle organization: Kantar – sequence: 11 givenname: John C. surname: Rowland fullname: Rowland, John C. organization: Kantar – sequence: 12 givenname: Eric M. surname: Pearlman fullname: Pearlman, Eric M. organization: Eli Lilly and Company |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35076091$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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Copyright | 2022 Eli Lilly and Company. published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Headache Society. 2022 Eli Lilly and Company. Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Headache Society. 2022. This article is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License. |
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Keywords | treatment diagnosis episodic migraine migraine headache unmet need |
Language | English |
License | Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2022 Eli Lilly and Company. Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Headache Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made. |
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Notes | Andre B. Araujo’s work completed while employed with Eli Lilly and Company. ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 content type line 23 |
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References | 2015; 35 2009; 47 2019; 9 2019; 90 2004; 62 2010; 14 2012 2017; 66 2020; 60 1992; 267 2019; 59 1993; 20 2015; 55 2019; 37 2012; 380 2008; 12 2009; 49 2001; 41 2012; 52 1998; 38 2003; 106 2019; 20 2020; 95 2011; 51 2013; 53 2017; 57 2015; 373 2008; 48 2008; 23 2008; 24 1999; 53 2017; 18 2020; 21 2001; 56 2007; 45 2007; 68 2018; 38 2007; 47 2018; 58 2010; 50 2014; 54 2014; 32 2007; 49 e_1_2_9_31_1 e_1_2_9_52_1 e_1_2_9_50_1 e_1_2_9_10_1 e_1_2_9_35_1 e_1_2_9_56_1 WHO (e_1_2_9_34_1) 2012 e_1_2_9_12_1 e_1_2_9_33_1 e_1_2_9_54_1 e_1_2_9_14_1 e_1_2_9_39_1 e_1_2_9_16_1 e_1_2_9_37_1 e_1_2_9_18_1 Serrano D (e_1_2_9_19_1) 2010; 50 e_1_2_9_41_1 e_1_2_9_20_1 e_1_2_9_22_1 e_1_2_9_45_1 e_1_2_9_24_1 e_1_2_9_43_1 e_1_2_9_8_1 e_1_2_9_6_1 e_1_2_9_4_1 e_1_2_9_2_1 e_1_2_9_26_1 e_1_2_9_49_1 e_1_2_9_28_1 e_1_2_9_47_1 e_1_2_9_30_1 e_1_2_9_53_1 e_1_2_9_51_1 e_1_2_9_11_1 e_1_2_9_13_1 e_1_2_9_32_1 e_1_2_9_55_1 e_1_2_9_15_1 e_1_2_9_38_1 e_1_2_9_17_1 e_1_2_9_36_1 e_1_2_9_42_1 e_1_2_9_40_1 e_1_2_9_21_1 e_1_2_9_46_1 e_1_2_9_23_1 e_1_2_9_44_1 e_1_2_9_7_1 e_1_2_9_5_1 e_1_2_9_3_1 e_1_2_9_9_1 e_1_2_9_25_1 e_1_2_9_27_1 e_1_2_9_48_1 e_1_2_9_29_1 |
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The ObserVational survey of the Epidemiology, tReatment and Care of MigrainE (OVERCOME; United States) study is a multicohort, longitudinal web... The ObserVational survey of the Epidemiology, tReatment and Care of MigrainE (OVERCOME; United States) study is a multicohort, longitudinal web survey that... ObjectiveThe ObserVational survey of the Epidemiology, tReatment and Care of MigrainE (OVERCOME; United States) study is a multicohort, longitudinal web survey... |
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SubjectTerms | Adult Cohort Studies Consultation Diagnosis Disabled Persons - statistics & numerical data Epidemiology episodic migraine Female Headache Heterogeneity Humans Longitudinal Studies Male Medical diagnosis Medical personnel Migraine Migraine Disorders - diagnosis Migraine Disorders - drug therapy Polls & surveys Quality assessment Referral and Consultation - statistics & numerical data Research Submissions Self Report Serotonin 5-HT1 Receptor Agonists - therapeutic use Surveys and Questionnaires treatment Tryptamines - therapeutic use United States unmet need |
Title | Diagnosis, consultation, treatment, and impact of migraine in the US: Results of the OVERCOME (US) study |
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