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      Migraine is first cause of disability in under 50s: will health politicians now take notice?

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          If it were needed, more evidence of the disconcerting under-treatment of headache disorders has come from the Eurolight study [1]. The topic is not new. Twenty years ago, the International and American Headache Societies jointly voiced their dismay at the inadequacies of health care for headache [2]. In 2006, the European Headache Federation and World Headache Alliance described migraine as a “forgotten epidemic” [3]. Meanwhile, in 2003, the Global Campaign against Headache [4–6] engaged the World Health Organization (WHO) as partner in this cause [7], embarking on a worldwide action programme which began by assessing the magnitude of headache in the world [4, 8]. In 2011, WHO’s global survey of headache disorders and resources, a Global Campaign project, laid bare the scale and scope of under-treated headache everywhere, and its consequences [9]. WHO wrote, in a message sent inter alia to the world’s Ministries of Health: “This first global enquiry into these matters illuminates the worldwide neglect of a major public-health problem, and reveals the inadequacies of responses to it in countries throughout the world” [9]. No words could be clearer but, to make sure, WHO repeated the message soon after [10]. Eurolight was a cross-sectional survey of over 8000 participants, conducted by multiple partners (scientific and lay) in 10 European countries [11]. A considerable strength of this study, apart from its size and geographical scope, was the use in all countries of the same questionnaire [12], a derivative of the HARDSHIP questionnaire already employed in many different countries, cultures and translations [13]. Also a strength was its scope of enquiry, simultaneously into migraine, tension-type headache (TTH) and medication-overuse headache (MOH), the three headache disorders of major public-health importance. This provided a broad view of headache in Europe. The different sampling methods employed by the countries in Eurolight produced samples that varied in their representativeness of the general population, arguably a strength in that it brought data into the survey from diversely-sourced samples [11, 12]. The new report analyses Eurolight data for indicators of adequacy of medical care [1]. The focus is on migraine, and the findings are depressing. Among 1175 participants in the 10 countries reporting frequent migraine – on more than five days per month, indicating unambiguous need for preventative medication – fewer than 20% had seen a health-care professional (general practitioner [GP] or specialist). In most countries, fewer than 10% were receiving what might be considered adequate acute treatment, and even smaller proportions had the preventative medication for which they were clearly eligible. Participants who had managed to make contact with specialists generally received better care by these indicators, which might be expected. Those seeing GPs were less well served, and those entirely dependent on self-medication – the large majority – fared poorly. In other words, the authors conclude, in wealthy Europe, too few people with migraine consult physicians, and migraine-specific medications are used inadequately even among those who do [1]. Is there hope at all for people with headache in less well-resourced countries? The Eurolight report comes soon after publication of the latest (2016) Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study [14]. “The most comprehensive worldwide observational epidemiological study to date” [15], GBD has been performed reiteratively since 1990, with estimates of health loss due to disease a principal objective [16]. Its findings, informing national health policies, offer a rational basis for priority setting and resource-allocation, driving service organisation and delivery to meet assessed needs. GBD now revises its estimates annually as it continuously develops and refines the methodology of disease-burden estimation and its expression as premature mortality (years of life lost: YLLs) and disability (years lived with disability: YLDs). At the same time, updated estimates take account of new epidemiological evidence as it continues to become available. Since migraine was first included in GBD, it has ascended the ranks of top causes of YLDs worldwide, from its debut at 19th in GBD 2000 [17] to seventh in GBD 2010 [18, 19] and sixth in GBD 2013 [20, 21]. This persistent rise is not indicative of increasing prevalence: it follows the collection and assimilation into GBD of ever better data as new population-based studies have slowly filled the large knowledge gaps, which as recently as 2007 related to more than half the world’s population [22]. With better knowledge, empirical data have replaced many of the assumptions underlying the earlier GBD estimates, and, as YLD calculations became prevalence-based rather than reliant on the less-easily ascertained incidence and duration, estimates have gained in reliability. In GBD 2015, migraine dropped back to seventh among causes of YLDs, partly because of revised estimates for other disorders, but, being notably age-related, it was third in both males and females aged 15–49 [23]. GBD 2016 offers sobering findings for those affected by or who care about migraine [14]. At level two of GBD’s disease hierarchy, neurological disorders collectively account for 8.6% of all YLDs in the world, and come fourth in the disability ranking (behind mental and substance use, “other non-communicable” and musculoskeletal disorders). At level three, headache disorders are the cause of more than three quarters of all neurological YLDs (6.5% of all YLDs), despite that neurological disorders include epilepsy, Alzheimer disease and other dementias, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis and motor neuron disease. At level four, migraine now takes second place, responsible for 5.6% of all YLDs in the world, behind only low back pain (7.2%) (Table 1). Table 1 Top 10 level-4 causes of disability in GBD 2016 (global, both sexes, all ages) Low back pain Migraine Age-related hearing loss Iron-deficiency anaemia Major depression Neck pain Other musculoskeletal disorders Diabetes Anxiety disorders Falls There is worse. In the age group 15–49 years, migraine is the top cause of YLDs [14] (Table 2). Let us not forget that these are the productive years, when education is completed, families formed, children raised, careers built and prospects for the whole remainder of life established. Whatever impact migraine-attributed disability may have more generally, during these years it is greatly magnified. Table 2 GBD 2016: Years lived with disability (YLDs) attributed to migraine by gender, age and region (from [14]) Region Gender Age range (years) % of total YLDs(95% CI) Rank Global Both All15–49 5.6 (4.0–7.2)8.2 (6.0–10.6) 21 M All15–49 4.3 (3.1–5.5)6.4 (4.6–8.2) 32 F All15–49 6.8 (4.9–8.8)9.8 (7.1–12.7) 21 North America Both All 4.8 (3.5–6.1) 5 Latin America and Caribbean 6.7 (4.9–8.6) 2 Western Europe 6.2 (4.5–7.9) 2 Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia 6.0 (4.4–7.7) 3 South Asia 6.5 (4.6–8.5) 2 SE and East Asia and Oceania 4.6 (3.3–6.0) 4 North Africa and Middle East 6.7 (5.0–8.6) 2 Sub-Saharan Africa 4.6 (3.2–6.1) 3 There is a ready explanation for the apparently steep rise in migraine since GBD 2015, conducted a year earlier: it lies with MOH. GBD 2015 regarded MOH as a separate disease [23]. While MOH is relatively uncommon (prevalence estimates vary around the world but are mostly in the range 1.5–3% [24, 25]), it is highly disabling, by definition characterised by headache on 15 or more days per month [26]. GBD 2015 placed it 18th among the causes of YLDs [23]. Nosologically, MOH is undoubtedly a distinct disease [26], but aetiologically it is a complication arising from mistreatment of other headache disorders, principally migraine and to a lesser extent TTH: it does not occur otherwise [26]. In GBD 2016, the decision was made that burden attributed to MOH would be more correctly attributed to the antecedent disorders, in due proportion (73.4% to migraine, 26.6% to TTH, from a meta-analysis of three studies [27–29]). Not everybody may agree with this, but there is both logic and purpose in recognising MOH as one of the sequelae (health states) of the antecedent headache disorder. In GBD terms, therefore, migraine is associated with three potential health states, each occurring with measurable probability (established in population-based studies): the ictal state (during an attack, with its symptoms), the interictal state (between recurrent attacks), and MOH. All three contribute to the disability burden of migraine, and all three contributions should be duly recognised. (We noted earlier that GBD does not consider disability associated with the interictal state of headache disorders [21], although significant interictal burden is reported by many people with migraine [30]). From GBD 2016 it is more evident than ever that headache disorders have a very large detrimental effect on public health. Table 2 shows that migraine is a major contributor to disability throughout the world, in both high- and low-income countries [14]. It is worth noting that, of the 21 regions into which GBD divides the world, five are still without any data on headache and more have only scarce data. Furthermore, most data are from adults, with relatively few studies reporting on children and adolescents. Nevertheless, headache disorders are, manifestly, an egregious cause of health loss. Why, then, when efficacious and cost-effective treatments exist [31, 32], do health services almost everywhere leave them side-lined [9, 10, 33]? Will health politicians finally take notice, now that migraine is top of the heap? Looking forward, and not to end on an impliedly negative note, we remind researchers that further population-based studies are needed to fill the remaining knowledge gaps. Quality in these is all-important: published methodological guidelines [34] and instruments [13] are available, and surveys should follow and adopt these. Ultimately, if studies contributing to GBD are standardized, future iterations of GBD may not only show the relative importance of headache in global public health but also monitor the benefits of improvements in headache care, new treatments and societal change.

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          The global burden of headache: a documentation of headache prevalence and disability worldwide.

          This study, which is a part of the initiative 'Lifting The Burden: The Global Campaign to Reduce the Burden of Headache Worldwide', assesses and presents all existing evidence of the world prevalence and burden of headache disorders. Population-based studies applying International Headache Society criteria for migraine and tension-type headache, and also studies on headache in general and 'chronic daily headache', have been included. Globally, the percentages of the adult population with an active headache disorder are 46% for headache in general, 11% for migraine, 42% for tension-type headache and 3% for chronic daily headache. Our calculations indicate that the disability attributable to tension-type headache is larger worldwide than that due to migraine. On the World Health Organization's ranking of causes of disability, this would bring headache disorders into the 10 most disabling conditions for the two genders, and into the five most disabling for women.
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            The impact of headache in Europe: principal results of the Eurolight project

            Background European data, at least from Western Europe, are relatively good on migraine prevalence but less sound for tension-type headache (TTH) and medication-overuse headache (MOH). Evidence on impact of headache disorders is very limited. Eurolight was a data-gathering exercise primarily to inform health policy in the European Union (EU). This manuscript reports personal impact. Methods The study was cross-sectional with modified cluster sampling. Surveys were conducted by structured questionnaire, including diagnostic questions based on ICHD-II and various measures of impact, and are reported from Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Spain and United Kingdom. Different methods of sampling were used in each. The full methodology is described elsewhere. Results Questionnaires were analysed from 8,271 participants (58% female, mean age 43.4 y). Participation-rates, where calculable, varied from 10.6% to 58.8%. Moderate interest-bias was detected. Unadjusted lifetime prevalence of any headache was 91.3%. Gender-adjusted 1-year prevalences were: any headache 78.6%; migraine 35.3%; TTH 38.2%, headache on ≥15 d/mo 7.2%; probable MOH 3.1%. Personal impact was high, and included ictal symptom burden, interictal burden, cumulative burden and impact on others (partners and children). There was a general gradient of probable MOH > migraine > TTH, and most measures indicated higher impact among females. Lost useful time was substantial: 17.7% of males and 28.0% of females with migraine lost >10% of days; 44.7% of males and 53.7% of females with probable MOH lost >20%. Conclusions The common headache disorders have very high personal impact in the EU, with important implications for health policy.
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              Migraine: the seventh disabler

              With the agreement of the Editors-in-Chief, this editorial is published simultaneously by Cephalalgia, Headache and The Journal of Headache and Pain. On 15th December 2012, a special edition of Lancet published the principal findings of the Global Burden of Disease Survey 2010 (GBD2010). Few reports are likely to have more profound meaning for people with headache, or carry greater promise for a better future, than the seven papers (and one in particular [1]) that were presented. GBD2010 was not the first such survey to be conducted, nor the first to give some recognition to the burden of migraine. The Global Burden of Disease Survey 2000 (GBD2000), conducted 12 years ago by the World Health Organization (WHO), listed migraine as the 19th cause of disability in the world, responsible for 1.4% of all years of life lost to disability (YLDs) [2]. This finding has been cited repeatedly ever since; it has fuelled attempts to generate political acceptance of headache as a public-health priority [3], and given credibility to calls for greater investment in headache care and research. It pushed headache into WHO’s field of view, and became an essential part of the platform on which the Global Campaign against Headache has since been built [3-5]. In spite of all this, GBD2000 considerably underreported the disability that migraine imposed on people throughout the world, and gave a very poor account of headache disorders collectively. The evidence was not there. For more than half the world’s population, estimates for migraine were based on very little: data of acceptable quality were not in existence for China, India and most other countries in South East Asia, most of Africa, all of the Eastern Mediterranean and all of eastern Europe [6]. Headache disorders other than migraine did not feature in GBD2000 at all; for these disorders, at that time, dependable evidence was lacking everywhere. Filling this evidence gap has been a priority of the Global Campaign in its first years [7]. As a result, GBD2010 has been much better informed and built on much sounder foundations than its predecessor (we return to this point later). GBD2010 was not a simple update of GBD2000, but a complete rerun: an entirely new world survey. Working with many partners, the Global Campaign against Headache being one, it took from the world literature all the epidemiological evidence pertaining to burdensome diseases, assessed it for quality and derived from it, for each of 21 world regions, best age-related estimates of prevalence. Like GBD2000, it measured burden in disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), separated into the two components of YLDs and years of life lost to early mortality (YLLs); for headache, only the former are relevant. New disability weights (DWs) were assigned to each disease: lay descriptions of the various health states that were predictable sequelae of each disease were fed into a web-based worldwide consultation, which conducted an iterative series of comparisons, one health state with another. For migraine and tension-type headache (TTH), descriptions were agreed of average cases and three health states of each: ictal (during attacks), interictal (between attacks), and the health state associated with medication-overuse headache (MOH), which was considered as a potential complication of either. Information from published studies on frequency and duration of migraine or TTH episodes was pooled in order to estimate the average proportions of time (pT) spent in the ictal as opposed to interictal state. MOH was assumed to be continuous (pT=1) when present. YLDs for each of these states were then derived as products of prevalence, pT and DW, and for each disease as the sum of YLDs for each health state. Data were included from 84 studies of migraine in 43 countries in 16 of the 21 world regions, and from 45 studies of TTH in 34 countries in 13 world regions. TTH (estimated global prevalence 20.1%) and migraine (14.7%) ranked respectively as second and third most common diseases in the world (behind dental caries) in both males and females. For migraine, the estimated proportion of time spent in the ictal state was 5.3%, and the DW assigned to migraine episodes was 0.433 (43.3% disability). On the basis of ictal disability alone, migraine was ranked seventh highest among specific causes of disability globally (responsible for 2.9% of all YLDs), and in the top ten causes of disability in 14 of the 21 world regions, showing little evidence of a gradient falling from west to east or of being a disorder preferentially of rich countries. Migraine was, by a wide margin, the leading cause of disability among neurological disorders, accounting for over half of all YLDs attributed to these. For TTH, the estimated proportion of time spent with headache was 2.4%, and the DW assigned to headache episodes was 0.040 (4% disability). TTH accounted for only 0.23% of all YLDs, much less than predicted [6], which undoubtedly was because of the very low DW accorded to the ictal state. Regrettably, GBD2010 is still an incomplete account of the global burden of headache, and it continues to underestimate the disability arising from headache disorders. TTH got in, but MOH, which would probably have added much more substantially to the total YLDs, was excluded late in the survey for reasons not made clear and despite the evidence submitted in support of it. Also at a late-stage, the inclusion of interictal disability was considered inconsistent with measurements made of other chronic episodic conditions, which penalized migraine more than TTH. Even so, this very high-profile survey of the world’s causes of ill health better recognizes headache than anything before, and this is a big step forward. We might be satisfied by this; but rather we should be appalled. GBD measures disease burden as it is – alleviated by whatever treatments are made available. Headache disorders are among the top ten causes of disability because they are common and disabling; that is clear. Headache is one of the most frequent medical complaints: almost everybody has experienced it, at least 10% of adults everywhere are sometimes disabled by it, and up to 3% live with it on more days than not [6]. But for what conceivable reason do headache disorders remain among these ignominious top ten when they are largely treatable? Another recent global survey, conducted collaboratively by WHO and Lifting The Burden, described “worldwide neglect of major causes of public ill-health, and the inadequacies of responses to them in countries throughout the world” [8]. It drew attention to the very large numbers of people disabled by headache who do not receive effective health care. The barriers responsible for this might vary throughout the world, but poor awareness of headache in a context of limited resources generally – and in health care in particular – was constantly among them [8]. The consequences are inevitable: illness that can be relieved is not, and heavy burdens, both individual and societal [9], persist when they can be mitigated. The findings of GBD2010 sadly reflect this. GBD2010 sends out a clarion call, conveying a message of which governments need to take note [3]. Experience suggests this call will need constantly to be re-echoed, but the opportunity to use GBD2010 – for a better future for people with headache – must not be missed. Competing interest The authors served on the Neurologic Disorders Expert Group in Headache for the Global Burden of Disease 2010 Study (funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation), and are directors and trustees of Lifting The Burden, which conducts the Global Campaign against Headache in official relations with WHO. TJS is honorary Global Campaign Director.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                t.steiner@imperial.ac.uk
                Journal
                J Headache Pain
                J Headache Pain
                The Journal of Headache and Pain
                Springer Milan (Milan )
                1129-2369
                1129-2377
                21 February 2018
                21 February 2018
                2018
                : 19
                : 1
                : 17
                Affiliations
                [1 ]ISNI 0000 0001 1516 2393, GRID grid.5947.f, Department of Neuromedicine and Movement Science, , NTNU Norwegian University of Science and Technology, ; Edvard Griegs Gate, Trondheim, Norway
                [2 ]ISNI 0000 0001 2113 8111, GRID grid.7445.2, Division of Brain Sciences, Imperial College London, ; London, UK
                [3 ]ISNI 0000 0004 0627 3560, GRID grid.52522.32, Norwegian Advisory Unit on Headache, Department of Neurology and Clinical Neurophysiology, , St Olavs University Hospital, ; Trondheim, Norway
                [4 ]ISNI 0000000122986657, GRID grid.34477.33, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), , University of Washington, ; Seattle, WA USA
                [5 ]ISNI 0000 0001 0674 042X, GRID grid.5254.6, Danish Headache Centre, Department of Neurology, , University of Copenhagen, Rigshospitalet Glostrup, ; Glostrup, Denmark
                [6 ]Department of Neurology, Evangelical Hospital Unna, Unna, Germany
                [7 ]ISNI 0000 0001 2187 5445, GRID grid.5718.b, Medical Faculty, , University of Duisburg-Essen, ; Essen, Germany
                Article
                846
                10.1186/s10194-018-0846-2
                5821623
                29468450
                71ce5495-8e08-467f-9af1-d9c050cb8bc9
                © The Author(s). 2018

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.

                History
                : 13 February 2018
                : 14 February 2018
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                Editorial
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                © The Author(s) 2018

                Anesthesiology & Pain management
                headache disorders,migraine,tension-type headache,medication-overuse headache,burden of disease,disability,public health,global burden of disease study,global campaign against headache

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