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Practice Fusion · Aug 29, 2017

Practice Fusion Migraine Patients by the Numbers

Practice Fusion analyzes data from migraine patients who visited a Practice Fusion provider in the last year.  

In 2011, the WHO published the “Atlas of Headache Disorders and Resources in the World” and called headache disorders “under-recognized, under-diagnosed, and under-treated worldwide” despite its prevalence. In their 2013 Global Burden of Disease Study, migraine was ranked as the sixth highest cause of worldwide years lost due to disability (YLD).

Migraine is one of three key types of headache disorders, the other two being tension-type headache and medication-overuse headache. It is usually characterized by recurrent headaches of “moderate to severe intensity,” one-sided, pulsating in quality, aggravated by routine physical activity, and can last anywhere from a few hours to a few days.

The gravity of this disorder prompted us to investigate using Practice Fusion’s de-identified patient database. Our database contains de-identified clinical information from Practice Fusion’s electronic health record on over 30K active practices, 40M active patients, and 5M monthly patient visits. In the 2012 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), 14.2% of US adults 18 or older reported having migraine or severe headache in the last 3 months. The following heat map illustrates the proportion of patients who had at least 1 visit to a PF practice in the last year and had a migraine diagnosis at any point in time. The overall proportion of patients with a migraine diagnosis on our platform is 1.64% and ranges from 0.1-4.3% by state. Vermont, Idaho or Wyoming, Oregon, and Alabama have the highest proportion of patients with a diagnosis of migraine. These low proportions of documented migraine diagnoses may suggest a high rate of undiagnosed patients with chronic migraine.

Migraine United States Heat Map

Of the subset of patients that specifically had “chronic migraine,” top comorbidities, excluding the most common diagnoses among all patients1, include headache, sleep disturbances, cervicalgia (neck pain), and malaise and fatigue. Rates of these diagnoses are more than double that of patients overall on the Practice Fusion platform. In our overall population of patients, 3.75% of patients had a diagnosis of headache, 5.69% sleep disturbances, 3.47% cervicalgia, and 5.88% malaise and fatigue.

Chronic Migraine Comorbidities

The following drug classes are the most common prescriptions written or documented by their providers. These top drugs are primarily used to treat migraine, pain, or depression. However, of all the patients with a diagnosis of chronic migraine, only about 41% of them have a written or documented prescription for a migraine-related drug2 which supports WHO’s findings that migraines are under-treated.

Most common migraine prescriptions

Practice Fusion Life Science Analytics Team,

Jessica Ken, Alina Bogdanov, and Felipe Caldeira


NOTES:

1 Excluded ICD9 diagnoses:

  • 401.9 Unspecified essential hypertension
  • 272.4 Other and unspecified hyperlipidemia
  • 250.0 Diabetes mellitus without mention of complication
  • 300.0 Anxiety states
  • 278.0 Overweight and obesity
  • V70.0 Routine general medical examination at a health care facility
  • 719.4 Pain in joint
  • 530.8 Other specified disorders of esophagus
  • 401.1 Benign essential hypertension
  • 724.2 Lumbago

2 Migraine-related drug classes:

  • Almotriptan
  • Dihydroergotamine
  • Eletriptan
  • Ergot Combination - Two Ingredient
  • Ergotamine
  • Frovatriptan
  • Naratriptan
  • Rizatriptan
  • Selective Serotonin Agonist-NSAID Combination -2 Ingredient
  • Sumatriptan
  • Topiramate
  • Zolmitriptan

References: