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Medication Overuse Headache (MOH) and an Innovative Approach

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Medication Overuse Headache
Interventions
Other: IEPR Approach
Registration Number
NCT02435056
Lead Sponsor
IRCCS National Neurological Institute "C. Mondino" Foundation
Brief Summary

Appropriate delivery of quality healthcare requires constant monitoring of the patient during follow up, particularly in the presence of chronic diseases. This approach can be further improved if leading edge tools supporting diagnosis, as well as prediction, identification and monitoring of adverse events are available. COMOESTAS aims to develop an innovative Information Communications Technology (ICT) system that allows patients with a chronic condition to receive continuous and personalized treatment. The whole system is based on an advanced, "all in one" Alerting and Decision Support System that follows patients from the diagnosis and supports the physician in managing the therapy, controlling relevant events impacting on patient safety and activating specific procedures if selected thresholds are exceeded. In the frame of chronic neurological disorders, Medication Overuse Headache (MOH) is a common condition and a major cause of disability. MOH is curable, but its outcome is hampered by a high risk of relapse. It is, therefore, a perfect example of a disorder that can benefit from an ICT-assisted approach developing innovative systems and services for monitoring chronic conditions. COMOESTAS goals will be achieved by improving and integrating the traditional paper headache diaries and calendars into an innovative ICT tool taking into account the complex issues that accompany this peculiar form of headache, which will make the patient a key node in the entire process.

Detailed Description

It will be a multicentre parallel group study. The two arms of the clinical protocol will be 1) classic approach to MOH and 2) Interactive Electronic Patient Record (IEPR)-based approach to MOH.

Each arm will last 12 months.

MOH will be diagnosed according to the 2006 MOH-R criteria of the International Headache Society as reported below:

A. Headache present on \> 15 days/month.

B. Regular overuse for \> 3 months of one or more acute symptomatic drugs:

1. Ergotamine, triptans, opioids or combination analgesic medications on \> 10 days/month on a regular basis for \> 3 months.

2. Simple analgesics or any combination of ergotamine, triptans, analgesics or opioids on \> 15 days/month on a regular basis for \>3 months without overuse (\> 10 days) of any single class alone.

C. Headache has developed or markedly worsened during medication overuse.

The IEPR approach will be preliminarily tested and validated in small groups of patients during months 6-12 (pilot validation).

Each patient will be evaluated over a period of 7 months.

Classic approach Visit 0: patient is examined and, if suspected to suffer from MOH, is asked to fill in a diary for a month in order to quantify parameters of MOH (days with headache, acute drugs consumed, etc.). Patient has to report that MOH-R criteria were fulfilled for the previous 2 months.

Visit 1: Patient returns to the Centre, diary data are analyzed and recorded, and, if criteria for MOH-R diagnosis are fulfilled and exclusion criteria are ruled out , patient is enrolled in COMOESTAS protocol.

Detoxification: following visit 1, patient undergoes detoxification according to the protocol in Appendix 1. In the subsequent 2 months the patient is instructed to record headache characteristics and consumption of symptomatic drugs on a paper diary.

Visit 2 (2 months after detoxification): patient is visited again; diary is checked; if therapy is successful (patient no longer overuses acute medications for headache) the patient is scheduled for a follow-up visit after 4 months. The patient is asked to keep up recording headache characteristics and consumption of symptomatic drugs on a paper diary for the next 4 months and informed about a telephone contact after 2 months.

Visit 3 (6 months after detoxification): patient is visited again, diary data are collected. Study ends.

IEPR approach Visit 0: patient is examined and, if the minimum data set of the IEPR for MOH is satisfied, the patients is asked to record the headache characteristics as well as acute drugs consumption on a paper diary for a month in order to assess baseline parameters of MOH (days with headache, acute drugs consumed, etc.).

Patient has to report that MOH-R criteria were fulfilled for the previous 2 months.

Visit 1: Patient returns to the Centre, diary data are analyzed and recorded, and, if criteria for MOH diagnosis are confirmed and criteria of exclusion are ruled out, patient is enrolled in COMOESTAS protocol .

Detoxification: following Visit 1, patient undergoes detoxification according to the same protocol adopted for the classic approach. During the detoxification phase, the patient is instructed to use the electronic diary and is then asked to fill the electronic diary on a regular basis (preferably daily or at least weekly) for the next 6 months.

Visit 2 (2 months after detoxification): patient is visited again; if therapy is successful (patient no longer overuses acute medications for headache), MOH diagnosis the patient is scheduled for a follow-up visit after 4 months and informed about a telephone contact after 2 months. The patient is asked to keep up filling the electronic diary for the next 4 months.

Visit 3: the patient is visited again. Study ends.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
690
Inclusion Criteria

Patients with MOH

Exclusion Criteria
  1. a current diagnosis of co-existent, significant and complicating medical or psychiatric illnesses
  2. significant overuse of "pure" opioids (patients overusing combination drugs containing opioids are allowed), benzodiazepines, and barbiturates,
  3. overuse of alcohol and other drugs of addiction,
  4. current treatment with migraine prophylactic drugs
  5. inefficacy of previous adequate detoxification programmes
  6. inability to provide reliable information about medical history
  7. pregnancy or breast feeding
  8. inability to learn how to use paper or electronic diaries

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
IEPR ApproachIEPR ApproachPatient has to use the electronic diary to record days with headache, acute drugs consumed, etc.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Relapse Rate Follow up6 month

Relapse Rate 6 months after withdrawal of patients with medication overuse. Relapse will be defined as use of ergotamine, triptans, opioids or combination analgesic medications on \> 10 days/month or use of simple analgesics or any combination of ergotamine, triptans, analgesics or opioids on \> 15 days/month during the previous month, with the exclusion of month +1.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
HURT scores24 month

Changes in HURT scores in the two arms

Drop-outs24 month

Number of drop-outs in the two arms

Days with headache6 month

Number of days with headache before and after detoxification in the two arms (month -1 vs. month +6)

Days per month with migraine6 month

Number of days per month with migraine before and after detoxification in the two arms (month -1 vs. month +6)

MOH patients/total number of headache24 month

Number of MOH patients/total number of headache patients during the recruitment period (18-24 months ) of the two arms

Midas scores24 month

Changes in Midas scores in the two arms

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