The Effect of Psychiatric Symptoms on Headache-Related Disability in Migraine: Results From the Chronic Migraine Epidemiology and Outcomes (CaMEO) Study (S52.007)

Conclusions:Migraine with depression and/or anxiety symptoms is common (38.8% of the sample). Depressive symptoms and anxiety symptoms alone are associated with greater headache-related disability after controlling for sociodemographic and headache features. In combination, depression and anxiety affect disability more than either symptom alone. Although this analysis cannot determine causation, interventions targeting depression and anxiety may help improve headache-related disability in persons with migraine.Study Supported by: Allergan plc, Dublin, IrelandDisclosure: Dr. Lipton has received personal compensation from Allergan, American Headache Society, Autonomic Technologies, Boston Scientific, Bristol Myers Squibb, Cognimed, Colucid, Eli Lilly, eNeura Therapeutics, Merck, Novartis, Pfizer, TEVA, Vedanta. Dr. Chu has received personal compensation for activities with Teva Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Seng has received personal compensation from GlaxoSmithKline as a consultant. Dr. Reed has received personal compensation for activities with Vedanta Research as an employee. Dr. Reed has received research support from Allergan, Amgen, Promius Pharma, and Mallinckrodt Pharma. Dr. Fanning has received personal compensation for activities with Vedanta Research as an employee. Dr. Manack Adams has received personal compensation for activities with Allergan as an employee. Dr. Manack Adams holds stock and or stock options in Allergan as an employee. Dr. Buse has received personal compens...
Source: Neurology - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Headache: Clinical Trials and Disease Burden Source Type: research