Administrative prevalence and incidence, characteristics and prescription patterns of patients with migraine in Germany: a retrospective claims data analysis

Abstract Background Migraine is a frequent headache disorder with high disease burden. The aims of this study were to determine the administrative prevalence and incidence of migraine in Germany; and to elucidate disease characteristics, prescription patterns and the patient journey through the Germ...

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Main Authors: Tatjana Roessler, Juergen Zschocke, Anne Roehrig, Michael Friedrichs, Heiko Friedel, Zaza Katsarava
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:The Journal of Headache and Pain
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s10194-020-01154-x
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spelling doaj-b104067a5bd04b20bfc435f3e551e2792020-11-25T03:44:42ZengBMCThe Journal of Headache and Pain1129-23691129-23772020-07-0121111610.1186/s10194-020-01154-xAdministrative prevalence and incidence, characteristics and prescription patterns of patients with migraine in Germany: a retrospective claims data analysisTatjana Roessler0Juergen Zschocke1Anne Roehrig2Michael Friedrichs3Heiko Friedel4Zaza Katsarava5Lilly Deutschland GmbHLilly Deutschland GmbHLilly Deutschland GmbHTeam GesundheitTeam GesundheitEvangelical Hospital UnnaAbstract Background Migraine is a frequent headache disorder with high disease burden. The aims of this study were to determine the administrative prevalence and incidence of migraine in Germany; and to elucidate disease characteristics, prescription patterns and the patient journey through the German healthcare system. Methods In this retrospective, observational study, adult patients with migraine (International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision, German modification G43) were identified in the anonymised German Company Sickness Fund database (CSFD) from 2008 through 2016. The administrative prevalence and incidence of migraine were calculated for the total CSFD study population and extrapolated to the German Statutory Health Insurance (SHI) population. Migraine subtypes, concurrent diagnoses, prescription patterns and visited healthcare professional groups were analysed. Results A total of 243,471 patients with migraine were identified in the CSFD (2008–2016); 78.0% were female and 45.3% were aged 35–54 years. The administrative prevalence of migraine, extrapolated to the SHI population, ranged between 2.89% in 2008 and 3.98% in 2016; administrative incidence ranged from 0.587% in 2009 to 0.267% in 2016, and varied between 0.399% and 0.442% during 2011 to 2015. Overall, 29.1% of patients received at least one prescription for any preventive medication listed in the German guideline. Only 7.9% received the same preventive medication for more than 1 year, with 82.9% of these patients discontinuing the medication before study end. Regarding acute medications, 74.2% of prescriptions were for analgesics/non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and 21.2% were for triptans. General practitioners most commonly diagnosed and treated migraine in the CSFD population. Patients with prescriptions for two or more different preventive therapy classes had higher use of acute and emergency medications, and visited healthcare professionals and hospitals more frequently than patients with no prescriptions or prescriptions for only one preventive therapy class. Conclusions The administrative prevalence of migraine in this claims database suggests many patients with migraine did not seek medical care. Of those who did, fewer than one-third received preventive medication, with most patients having been prescribed only one such medication and few having continued treatment beyond 1 year. These outcomes suggest there is scope for improvement in migraine management in Germany.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s10194-020-01154-xMigraineGermanyAdministrative prevalenceAdministrative incidenceComorbidityPrescription patterns
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tatjana Roessler
Juergen Zschocke
Anne Roehrig
Michael Friedrichs
Heiko Friedel
Zaza Katsarava
spellingShingle Tatjana Roessler
Juergen Zschocke
Anne Roehrig
Michael Friedrichs
Heiko Friedel
Zaza Katsarava
Administrative prevalence and incidence, characteristics and prescription patterns of patients with migraine in Germany: a retrospective claims data analysis
The Journal of Headache and Pain
Migraine
Germany
Administrative prevalence
Administrative incidence
Comorbidity
Prescription patterns
author_facet Tatjana Roessler
Juergen Zschocke
Anne Roehrig
Michael Friedrichs
Heiko Friedel
Zaza Katsarava
author_sort Tatjana Roessler
title Administrative prevalence and incidence, characteristics and prescription patterns of patients with migraine in Germany: a retrospective claims data analysis
title_short Administrative prevalence and incidence, characteristics and prescription patterns of patients with migraine in Germany: a retrospective claims data analysis
title_full Administrative prevalence and incidence, characteristics and prescription patterns of patients with migraine in Germany: a retrospective claims data analysis
title_fullStr Administrative prevalence and incidence, characteristics and prescription patterns of patients with migraine in Germany: a retrospective claims data analysis
title_full_unstemmed Administrative prevalence and incidence, characteristics and prescription patterns of patients with migraine in Germany: a retrospective claims data analysis
title_sort administrative prevalence and incidence, characteristics and prescription patterns of patients with migraine in germany: a retrospective claims data analysis
publisher BMC
series The Journal of Headache and Pain
issn 1129-2369
1129-2377
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background Migraine is a frequent headache disorder with high disease burden. The aims of this study were to determine the administrative prevalence and incidence of migraine in Germany; and to elucidate disease characteristics, prescription patterns and the patient journey through the German healthcare system. Methods In this retrospective, observational study, adult patients with migraine (International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision, German modification G43) were identified in the anonymised German Company Sickness Fund database (CSFD) from 2008 through 2016. The administrative prevalence and incidence of migraine were calculated for the total CSFD study population and extrapolated to the German Statutory Health Insurance (SHI) population. Migraine subtypes, concurrent diagnoses, prescription patterns and visited healthcare professional groups were analysed. Results A total of 243,471 patients with migraine were identified in the CSFD (2008–2016); 78.0% were female and 45.3% were aged 35–54 years. The administrative prevalence of migraine, extrapolated to the SHI population, ranged between 2.89% in 2008 and 3.98% in 2016; administrative incidence ranged from 0.587% in 2009 to 0.267% in 2016, and varied between 0.399% and 0.442% during 2011 to 2015. Overall, 29.1% of patients received at least one prescription for any preventive medication listed in the German guideline. Only 7.9% received the same preventive medication for more than 1 year, with 82.9% of these patients discontinuing the medication before study end. Regarding acute medications, 74.2% of prescriptions were for analgesics/non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and 21.2% were for triptans. General practitioners most commonly diagnosed and treated migraine in the CSFD population. Patients with prescriptions for two or more different preventive therapy classes had higher use of acute and emergency medications, and visited healthcare professionals and hospitals more frequently than patients with no prescriptions or prescriptions for only one preventive therapy class. Conclusions The administrative prevalence of migraine in this claims database suggests many patients with migraine did not seek medical care. Of those who did, fewer than one-third received preventive medication, with most patients having been prescribed only one such medication and few having continued treatment beyond 1 year. These outcomes suggest there is scope for improvement in migraine management in Germany.
topic Migraine
Germany
Administrative prevalence
Administrative incidence
Comorbidity
Prescription patterns
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s10194-020-01154-x
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