Association of a Cyclical Migraine Phenotype With Disease Progression
A 1-Year Time Series Analysis
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Abstract
Background and Objectives Longitudinal studies assessing cyclic fluctuations of migraine attacks using time series analysis are scarce. Here, we analyze headache frequency fluctuations over a year in a cohort of patients with migraine, and we then evaluate how this behavior has an effect on clinical evolution.
Methods Monthly headache frequency was prospectively collected using an electronic diary. Prognosis after 1 year was calculated as the headache frequency change rate after 12 months (HCR-M12) as a dependent variable. Monthly headache time series was decomposed into all the possible sum of sinusoids through a fast Fourier transform (FFT) algorithm, and the frequencies with the highest power were used to define the patient's cyclic phenotype during 1 year (patient's number of cycles per year, c/y). Patients with a cyclic phenotype were those with >2 c/y. Finally, we studied how this cyclic phenotype was associated with HCR-M12 using generalized linear models (GLMs).
Results A total of 142 patients were included (85.2% female; mean age 48.0 ± 9.7 years), 50.0% fulfilled the International Classification of Headache Disorders, third edition, criteria for chronic migraine (CM). After 1 year, a 50.7% (72/142) of patients changed their initial diagnosis, and progression (frequency worsening) was observed in 14.1% (10/71) of patients with episodic migraine (EM). After applying an FFT, 45.1% (64/142) of patients fitted into a cyclic phenotype. In GLM, statistically significant main effects associated with HCR-M12 were the use of preventive therapy (β [SE]: 74.1 [34.6]; p = 0.034) and cyclic phenotype (β [SE]: 158.33 [55.1]; p = 0.005). A post hoc analysis found that patients with EM with cyclic phenotype without adequate preventive therapy were statistically significantly associated with progression.
Discussion Monthly headache frequency data can be fitted by sinusoidal models. Having a cyclic phenotype has an effect on clinical evolution and has been statistically significantly associated with migraine progression after 1 year. Particularly, patients with EM with cyclic phenotype tend to increase their headache frequency over time. Preventive treatment seems to play a fundamental role in modulating this cyclic behavior, especially in patients with low-frequency EM.
Glossary
- AIC=
- Akaike information criterion;
- CGRP=
- calcitonin gene-related peptide;
- c/y=
- cycles per year;
- CM=
- chronic migraine;
- e-Diary=
- electronic daily headache calendar;
- FFT=
- fast Fourier transform;
- GLM=
- generalized linear model;
- HCR-M12=
- headache change rate after 12 months;
- HFEM=
- high-frequency episodic migraine;
- ICHD-3=
- International Classification of Headache Disorders, third edition;
- LFEM=
- low-frequency episodic migraine;
- MHD=
- monthly headache day;
- MO=
- medication overuse
Footnotes
Go to Neurology.org/N for full disclosures. Funding information and disclosures deemed relevant by the authors, if any, are provided at the end of the article.
↵* These authors contributed equally to this work.
Submitted and externally peer reviewed. The handling editor was Rebecca Burch, MD.
- Received November 19, 2021.
- Accepted in final form May 11, 2022.
- © 2022 American Academy of Neurology
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Letters: Rapid online correspondence
- Reader Response: Association of a Cyclical Migraine Phenotype With Disease Progression: A One-Year Time Series Analysis
- Vinod K. Gupta, Physician-Medical Director, GUPTA MEDICAL CENTRE, MIGRAINE-HEADACHE INSTITUTE, S-407, Greater Kailash-Part Two, New Delhi, INDIA-110048
Submitted August 13, 2022
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