Migraine-Related Stigma and Its Relationship to Disability, Interictal Burden, and Quality of Life Results of the OVERCOME (US) Study

被引:41
作者
Shapiro, Robert E. [1 ]
Nicholson, Robert A. [2 ]
Seng, Elizabeth K. [3 ]
Buse, Dawn C. [4 ]
Reed, Michael L. [5 ]
Zagar, Anthony J. [2 ]
Ashina, Sait [6 ]
Muenzel, E. Jolanda [2 ]
Hutchinson, Susan [7 ]
Pearlman, Eric M. [2 ]
Lipton, Richard B. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Vermont, Larner Coll Med, Burlington, NJ USA
[2] Eli Lilly & Co, Indianapolis, IN 46285 USA
[3] Yeshiva Univ, New York, NY USA
[4] Montefiore Med Ctr, Albert Einstein Coll Med, Bronx, NY USA
[5] Vedanta Res, Chapel Hill, NC USA
[6] Harvard Med Sch, Beth Israel Deaconess Med Ctr, Boston, MA USA
[7] Orange Cty Migraine & Headache Ctr, Irvine, CA USA
关键词
MENTAL-ILLNESS; UNITED-STATES; VALIDATION; PEOPLE; QUESTIONNAIRE; PREVALENCE; ATTITUDES; HEALTH; IMPACT; SCALE;
D O I
10.1212/WNL.0000000000208074
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background and ObjectivesThis population-based analysis characterizes the relative frequency of migraine-related stigma and its cross-sectional relationship to migraine outcomes. We hypothesized that migraine-related stigma would be inversely associated with favorable migraine outcomes across headache day categories. MethodsOVERCOME (US) is a web-based observational study that annually recruited a demographically representative US sample and then identified people with active migraine using a validated migraine diagnostic questionnaire. It also assessed how frequently respondents experienced migraine-related stigma using a novel 12-item questionnaire (Migraine-Related Stigma, MiRS) that contained 2 factors; feeling that others viewed migraine as being used for Secondary Gain (8 items, alpha = 0.92) and feeling that others were Minimizing disease Burden (4 items, alpha = 0.86). We defined 5 groups: (1) MiRS-Both (Secondary Gain and Minimizing Burden often/very often; (2) MiRS-SG (Secondary Gain often/very often); (3) MiRS-MB (Minimizing Burden often/very often); (4) MiRS-Rarely/Sometimes; (5) MiRS-Never. Using MiRS group as the independent variable, we modeled its cross-sectional relationship to disability (Migraine Disability Assessment, MIDAS), interictal burden (Migraine Interictal Burden Scale-4), and migraine-specific quality of life (Migraine Specific Quality of Life v2.1 Role Function-Restrictive) while controlling for sociodemographics, clinical features, and monthly headache day categories. ResultsAmong this population-based sample with active migraine (n = 59,001), mean age was 41.3 years and respondents predominantly identified as female (74.9%) and as White (70.1%). Among respondents, 41.1% reported experiencing, on average, >= 4 monthly headache days and 31.7% experienced migraine-related stigma often/very often; the proportion experiencing migraine-related stigma often/very often increased from 25.5% among those with <4 monthly headache days to 47.5% among those with >= 15 monthly headache days. The risk for increased disability (MIDAS score) was significant for each MiRS group compared with the MiRS-Never group; the risk more than doubled for the MiRS-Both group (rate ratio 2.68, 95% CI 2.56-2.80). For disability, interictal burden, and migraine-specific quality of life, increased migraine-related stigma was associated with increased disease burden across all monthly headache day categories. DiscussionOVERCOME (US) found that 31.7% of people with migraine experienced migraine-related stigma often/very often and was associated with more disability, greater interictal burden, and reduced quality of life.
引用
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页数:13
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