Brief intervention by general practitioners for medication-overuse headache, follow-up after 6 months: a pragmatic cluster-randomised controlled trial

被引:0
|
作者
Espen Saxhaug Kristoffersen
Jørund Straand
Kjersti Grøtta Vetvik
Jūratė Šaltytė Benth
Michael Bjørn Russell
Christofer Lundqvist
机构
[1] University of Oslo,Department of General Practice, Institute of Health and Society
[2] Akershus University Hospital,HØKH, Research Centre
[3] Akershus University Hospital,Head and Neck Research Group, Research Centre
[4] University of Oslo,Institute of Clinical Medicine, Campus Akershus University Hospital
[5] Akershus University Hospital,Department of Neurology
来源
Journal of Neurology | 2016年 / 263卷
关键词
Medication-overuse headache; Migraine; Screening and brief intervention; General practice; Severity of dependence scale; Cluster-randomised trial;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Medication-overuse headache (MOH) is a common health problem. Withdrawal of the overused medication is the treatment of choice. We investigated the long-term effectiveness of brief intervention (BI) for MOH patients in primary care. The BI for MOH in primary care study was a blinded, pragmatic, cluster-randomised controlled trial. 25,486 patients (age 18–50) from 50 general practitioners (GPs) were screened for MOH. GPs defined clusters and 23 GPs were randomised to receive BI training and 27 GPs to continue business as usual (BAU). The GPs assessed their MOH patients with the Severity of Dependence Scale, gave individual feedback about the risk of MOH and advice to reduce headache medication. Primary outcomes, assessed 6 months after the intervention, were reduction in headache and medication days/month. 42 % were screening responders. 2.4 % had self-reported MOH. A random selection of 104 patients with self-reported MOH were invited, 75 were randomised out of which 60 with a physician-defined MOH diagnosis were included. None were lost to follow-up. BI was significantly better than BAU regarding primary outcomes (p < 0.001–0.018). Headache and medication days were reduced by 5.9 (95 % CI 1.1–10.8) and 6.2 (1.1–11.3) more days/month in BI than BAU group. Chronic headache resolved in 63 and 11 % in the BI and the BAU group (p < 0.001). Headache-related disability was lower among those who detoxified. In conclusion, BI is an effective treatment in primary care with lasting effect 6 months after the intervention for MOH.
引用
收藏
页码:344 / 353
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Exercise Dose Effects on Body Fat 12 Months after an Exercise Intervention: Follow-up from a Randomized Controlled Trial
    Friedenreich, Christine M.
    Ruan, Yibing
    Duha, Aalo
    Courneya, Kerry S.
    JOURNAL OF OBESITY, 2019, 2019
  • [42] Promoting physical activity in low back pain patients: six months follow-up of a randomised controlled trial comparing a multicomponent intervention with a low intensity intervention
    Schaller, Andrea
    Dintsios, Charalabos-Markos
    Icks, Andrea
    Reibling, Nadine
    Froboese, Ingo
    CLINICAL REHABILITATION, 2016, 30 (09) : 865 - 877
  • [43] The BrEasT cancer afTER-CARE (BETTER-CARE) programme to improve breast cancer follow-up: design and feasibility study results of a cluster-randomised complex intervention trial
    Horn, Anna
    Wendel, Julia
    Franke, Isabella
    Bauer, Armin
    Baumeister, Harald
    Bendig, Eileen
    Brucker, Sara Y.
    Deutsch, Thomas M.
    Garatva, Patricia
    Haas, Kirsten
    Heil, Lorenz
    Huegen, Klemens
    Manger, Helena
    Pryss, Ruediger
    Ruecker, Viktoria
    Salmen, Jessica
    Szczesny, Andrea
    Vogel, Carsten
    Wallwiener, Markus
    Woeckel, Achim
    Heuschmann, Peter U.
    TRIALS, 2024, 25 (01)
  • [44] Impact of a Brief Group Intervention to Enhance Parenting and the Home Learning Environment for Children Aged 6-36 Months: a Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial
    Hackworth, N. J.
    Berthelsen, D.
    Matthews, J.
    Westrupp, E. M.
    Cann, W.
    Ukoumunne, O. C.
    Bennetts, S. K.
    Phan, T.
    Scicluna, A.
    Trajanovska, M.
    Yu, M.
    Nicholson, J. M.
    PREVENTION SCIENCE, 2017, 18 (03) : 337 - 349
  • [45] Do spirometry and regular follow-up improve health outcomes in general practice patients with asthma or COPD? A cluster randomised controlled trial
    Abramson, Michael J.
    Schattner, Rosa L.
    Sulaiman, Nabil D.
    Birch, Kate E.
    Simpson, Pam P.
    Del Colle, Eleonora A.
    Aroni, Rosalie A.
    Wolfe, Rory
    Thien, Francis C. K.
    MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 2010, 193 (02) : 104 - 109
  • [46] Cost-Effectiveness of One Year Dementia Follow-Up Care by Memory Clinics or General Practitioners: Economic Evaluation of a Randomised Controlled Trial
    Meeuwsen, Els
    Melis, Rene
    van der Aa, Geert
    Goluke-Willemse, Gertie
    de Leest, Benoit
    van Raak, Frank
    Scholzel-Dorenbos, Carla
    Verheijen, Desiree
    Verhey, Frans
    Visser, Marieke
    Wolfs, Claire
    Adang, Eddy
    Rikkert, Marcel Olde
    PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (11):
  • [47] Impact of a post-partum family planning intervention on contraception and fertility in Tanzania: two-year follow-up of a cluster-randomised controlled trial (vol 29, pg 24, 2024)
    Rohr, Julia K.
    Huber-Krum, Sarah
    Rugarabamu, Angelica
    Pearson, Erin
    Francis, Joel M.
    Senderowicz, Leigh
    Guo, Muqi
    Siril, Hellen
    Shah, Iqbal
    Canning, David
    Ulenga, Nzovu
    Barnighausen, Till W.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CONTRACEPTION AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH CARE, 2024, 29 (02): : 79 - 79
  • [48] The effect of education and telephone follow-up intervention based on the Roy Adaptation Model after myocardial infarction: randomised controlled trial
    Kavradim, Selma Turan
    Ozer, Zeynep Canli
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF CARING SCIENCES, 2020, 34 (01) : 247 - 260
  • [49] Intermediate hyperglycaemia, diabetes and blood pressure in rural Bangladesh: five-year post-randomisation follow-up of the DMagic cluster-randomised controlled trial
    Fottrell, Edward
    King, Carina
    Ahmed, Naveed
    Shaha, Sanjit Kumer
    Morrison, Joanna
    Pires, Malini
    Kuddus, Abdul
    Nahar, Tasmin
    Haghparast-Bidgoli, Hassan
    Khan, A. K. Azad
    Azad, Kishwar
    LANCET REGIONAL HEALTH - SOUTHEAST ASIA, 2023, 10
  • [50] Effects of a lifestyle intervention programme after 1 year of follow-up among South Asians at high risk of type 2 diabetes: a cluster randomised controlled trial
    Muilwijk, Mirthe
    Loh, Marie
    Siddiqui, Samreen
    Mahmood, Sara
    Palaniswamy, Saranya
    Shahzad, Khurram
    Athauda, Lathika K.
    Jayawardena, Ranil
    Batool, Tayyaba
    Burney, Saira
    Glover, Matthew
    Bamunuarachchi, Vodathi
    Panda, Manju
    Madawanarachchi, Madawa
    Rai, Baldeesh
    Sattar, Iqra
    Silva, Wnurinham
    Waghdhare, Swati
    Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta
    Rannan-Eliya, Ravindra Prasan
    Wijemunige, Nilmini
    Gage, Heather M.
    Valabhji, Jonathan
    Frost, Gary S.
    Wickremasinghe, Rajitha
    Kasturiratne, Anuradhani
    Khawaja, Khadija, I
    Ahmad, Sajjad
    van Valkengoed, Irene G. M.
    Katulanda, Prasad
    Jha, Sujeet
    Kooner, Jaspal S.
    Chambers, John C.
    BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH, 2021, 6 (11):