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Efficacy of Smartphone Based Digital Application in Improving Headache Related Parameters in Patients With Migraine

Not Applicable
Conditions
Migraine
Interventions
Behavioral: Smartphone based digital application
Registration Number
NCT04984720
Lead Sponsor
All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi
Brief Summary

Migraine is a common headache disorder and affects 1 in 5 adults during their lifetime. It is a disorder which leads to significantly impaired quality of life, absence from work, loss of productivity in workplace and reduced vitality in social functioning. One of the important cornerstones in the management of migraine is the maintenance of a good headache diary. A headache diary enables the physician to understand the headache characteristics as well to establish the triggers causing the precipitation of episodes. The other important measure to ensure good outcomes is compliance to medications in those who have been prescribed prophylaxis. Migraine prophylaxis is by pills that have to be taken everyday at fixed time to ensure best outcomes. However, it is known that patients with migraine often are not adherent to prophylactic medications. A meta-analysis of 33 studies found that observational studies (n = 14) showed adherence ranging from 41% to 95% at 2 months after initiation of medication and 21% to 80% at 6 months. Pooled rates of persistence derived from 19 RCTs on propranolol, amitriptyline, and topiramate showed adherence rates of 77%, 55%, and 57%, respectively, at 16-26 weeks of initiation. The real world adherence is expected to be lower than that in the ideal settings of randomized trials. Regular pill reminders issued through smartphone based applications can improve medication adherence and thus improve headache outcomes. Though smartphone based migraine tracker digital applications are available, they mostly are aimed at capturing headache characteristics. The efficacy of providing pill reminders along with patient educational materials and community blog to enable migraineurs share their experiences with each other has not been studied in controlled trials. It is known that patients who are well informed about their chronic diseases such as migraine often have better outcomes. Busy clinicians often resort to providing pamphlets regarding the disease, triggers, acute pain relief medications, prophylactic therapy etc. However, it is yet to be studied if a digital application with all these inbuilt features, which are easily accessible at the finger tips would lead to better information uptake and improved compliance and self management. This RCT would try to assess this gap in knowledge.

Detailed Description

Migraine is a common headache disorder which leads to significantly impaired quality of life, absence from work, loss of productivity in workplace and reduced vitality in social functioning. A structured migraine diary can be a valuable aid for improving communication between patients and physicians regarding migraine disability and treatment outcomes. The other possible measure to ensure improved outcome in migraine patients is better adherence to prophylactic treatment of migraine. Migraine prophylaxis is by pills that have to be taken every day at fixed time to ensure best outcomes. However, it is known that patients with migraine often are not adherent to prophylactic medications. Regular pill reminders issued through smartphone based applications may help improve medication adherence and hence, headache outcomes. Though smartphone based migraine tracker digital applications are available, they mostly are aimed at capturing headache characteristics. The efficacy of providing pill reminders along with patient educational materials and community blog to enable migraineurs share their experiences with each other has not been studied in controlled trials. It is known that patients who are well informed about their chronic diseases such as migraine often have better outcomes. Busy clinicians often resort to providing pamphlets regarding the disease, triggers, acute pain relief medications, prophylactic therapy etc. However, it is yet to be studied if a digital application with all these inbuilt features, which are easily accessible at the finger tips would lead to better information uptake and improved compliance and self management. This RCT would try to assess this gap in knowledge.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
400
Inclusion Criteria
  • Adult patients attending neurology OPD.
  • At least 18 years of age; any gender.
  • Episodic or chronic migraine diagnosed (using International Classification of Headache Disorders-3 (ICHD-3) .
  • No modifications to the prophylactic therapy or acute pain relief medications is planned over the next 3 months.
  • Can read and write in Hindi or English easily.
  • Have an Android/iOS smart phone in which digital application can be installed and who knows how to operate smart phone.
  • Ready to provide consent and willing to adhere to protocol and comply with follow up visits.
  • No major neurological or systemic medical condition that reduces life expectancy to less than 1 year based on clinical prediction scores.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Not willing to adhere to protocol.
  • Not willing to provide consent.
  • Inability or unwillingness to complete diary recording.
  • Patients with Medication over use headache ( as per ICHD -3).
  • Other primary headaches and secondary headache disorders.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Smart phone based digital app armSmartphone based digital applicationDigital smartphone application which tracks migraine and to offers pill reminders for medication adherence and community blog and disease related educational material for migraineurs will be given to the patients
Paper and pen diary armSmartphone based digital applicationClinic based education and traditional paper-pen diary will be administered in tracking headache parameters
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in HIT-6 (Headache impact test-6) score4 weeks

To compare the change in HIT-6 (Headache impact test-6 ranges from 36-78 with a higher score indicating greater severity) score from baseline to 4 weeks after introduction of the digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary.

Reduction in headache days4 weeks

To compare the percentage of patients reporting 30 % or more reduction in headache days at 4 weeks following introduction of digital smart phone based application vs paper-pen diary .

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Compliance4 weeks

The proportion of patients who comply with using the digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary.

Headache severity on VAS (Visual analogue scale)4 weeks

Headache severity on VAS scale (0-10 with higher score meaning greater pain) in patients using the digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary

Change from baseline in need for rescue medication4 weeks

Change from baseline in number of headache episodes needing acute pain relief medications in patients using the digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary.

Omission rates4 weeks

Omission rates in daily diary entries in patients using the digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary.

Number of headache days per 28 days4 weeks

The number of headache days per 28 days following usage of digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary.

change from baseline in the number of days with severe headaches per 28 days4 weeks

The change from baseline in the number of days with severe headaches in the preceding 4 weeks as compared with baseline in patients using the digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary.

Change from baseline in the duration of headache episodes in the preceding 4 weeks4 weeks

The change from baseline in the duration of headache episodes in the preceding 4 weeks as compared with baseline in patients using the digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary

Change from baseline in severity of headache on VAS scale (Visual analogue scale)4 weeks

Change from baseline in severity of headache on VAS scale (0-10 with higher score meaning greater pain) in patients using the digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary

Number of headache episodes needing rescue medication4 weeks

The number of headache episodes needing rescue medication in patients using the digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary.

Change in number of headache days per 28 days from baseline4 weeks

The change from baseline in number of headache days per 28 days following usage of digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary .

Triggers4 weeks

Factors that trigger the onset of headaches (like specific foods, sleep deprivation, travel, etc) in patients using the digital smartphone based application vs paper-pen diary.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi

🇮🇳

New Delhi, Delhi, India

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