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The “care” protocol: outcome of medication overuse headache in a three year follow-up study

Introduction

Medication Overuse Headache (MOH) has become one of the major challenges in headache management. The main aim of the present study was to evaluate the factors associated with a negative outcome in a three-year follow-up of subjects diagnosed with MOH.

Methods

All consecutive patients with MOH entering, for the first time, the centre’s inpatient detoxification program were analyzed in a prospective, non randomized way. They were enrolled as outpatients and gave their verbal informed consent to undergo the protocol (inpatient detoxification and three follow-up visits in the first year, then six-monthly clinical controls). The diagnosis of MOH was made according to the revised-ICHD-II criteria [1]. All the participants were assessed using an ad hoc patient’s record form. Variables analyzed as possible predictors were: gender, age, socio-demographic characteristics, alcohol/coffee/smoking habits, positive family history for drug abuse and/or headache, past medical history, primary headache type, type, duration and quantification of drug overuse and duration of chronic headache. Categorical variables were analyzed with the Chi-square test. For quantitative variables, statistical differences were analyzed with ANOVA. Odds Ratios (ORs) were calculated for dichotomous outcomes as well.

Findings

One-hundred-fifty patients completed the 3-year follow-up (79.3% females, age 46.40±11.31): 13 patients never stopped overuse (Group A), 38 patients stopped drug overuse, but relapsed at least once (Group B) and 99 patients never relapsed (Group C). Patients in Group A differed from B+C groups because they were more frequently single (OR 0.134;p=0.007) and unemployed (OR=3.273;p=0.04), they took a higher number of acute drugs (p<0.001) and used less frequently coffee (OR 3.273;p=0.044).

Conclusion

The outcome of disease in this group of MOH patients was influenced negatively by the severity of overuse (and possibly of the disease) and by specific socio-economic conditions. Other factors that emerged as possible modifiers of outcome were voluptuary habits.

References

  1. Headache Classification Committee, Olesen J, Bousser MG, Diener HC, et al.: New appendix criteria open for a broader concept of chronic migraine. Cephalalgia 2006, 26: 742–746.

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Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Sances, G., Ghiotto, N., Galli, F. et al. The “care” protocol: outcome of medication overuse headache in a three year follow-up study. J Headache Pain 14 (Suppl 1), P175 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1186/1129-2377-14-S1-P175

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1129-2377-14-S1-P175

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