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Response to Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy Differs Between Chronic and Episodic Migraine.


ABSTRACT:

Objective

Evaluate whether the benefits of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Migraine (MBCT-M) on headache disability differs among people with episodic and chronic migraine (CM).

Methods

This is a planned secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial. After a 30-day baseline, participants were stratified by episodic (6-14 d/mo) and CM (15-30 d/mo) and randomized to 8 weekly individual sessions of MBCT-M or wait list/treatment as usual (WL/TAU). Primary outcomes (Headache Disability Inventory; Severe Migraine Disability Assessment Scale [scores ≥ 21]) were assessed at months 0, 1, 2, and 4. Mixed models for repeated measures tested moderation with fixed effects of treatment, time, CM, and all interactions. Planned subgroup analyses evaluated treatment*time in episodic and CM.

Results

Of 60 participants (MBCT-M N = 31, WL/TAU N = 29), 52% had CM. CM moderated the effect of MBCT-M on Severe Migraine Disability Assessment Scale, F(3, 205) = 3.68, p = 0.013; MBCT-M vs WL/TAU reduced the proportion of people reporting severe disability to a greater extent among people with episodic migraine (-40.0% vs -14.3%) than CM (-16.4% vs +8.7%). Subgroup analysis revealed MBCT-M (vs WL/TAU) significantly reduced Headache Disability Inventory for episodic (p = 0.011) but not CM (p = 0.268).

Conclusions

MBCT-M is a promising treatment for reducing headache-related disability, with greater benefits in episodic than CM.

Trial registration information

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02443519.

Classification of evidence

This study provides Class III evidence that MBCT-M reduces headache disability to a greater extent in people with episodic than CM.

SUBMITTER: Seng EK 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8382359 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Response to Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy Differs Between Chronic and Episodic Migraine.

Seng Elizabeth K EK   Conway Alexandra B AB   Grinberg Amy S AS   Patel Zarine S ZS   Marzouk Maya M   Rosenberg Lauren L   Metts Christopher C   Day Melissa A MA   Minen Mia T MT   Buse Dawn C DC   Lipton Richard B RB  

Neurology. Clinical practice 20210601 3


<h4>Objective</h4>Evaluate whether the benefits of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Migraine (MBCT-M) on headache disability differs among people with episodic and chronic migraine (CM).<h4>Methods</h4>This is a planned secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial. After a 30-day baseline, participants were stratified by episodic (6-14 d/mo) and CM (15-30 d/mo) and randomized to 8 weekly individual sessions of MBCT-M or wait list/treatment as usual (WL/TAU). Primary outcomes (Headach  ...[more]

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