Headache and psychological variables as predictors of disability in individuals with primary headache disorders

Author:

McCracken Halle T.1,Lee Aaron A.1,Smitherman Todd A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology University of Mississippi University Mississippi USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo examine the relative contribution of headache symptoms and psychological factors to headache‐related disability.BackgroundBoth headache symptoms and comorbid psychological factors (psychiatric symptoms and transdiagnostic constructs) negatively impact functioning among individuals with migraine and tension‐type headache, but few studies have explored their relative contribution to headache‐related disability. We hypothesized that psychiatric symptoms and transdiagnostic variables would afford incremental contribution to disability beyond headache symptoms, and we investigated the moderating role of headache diagnosis on these relationships.MethodsThis cross‐sectional study examined data from a southern U.S. university online sample of 1818 young adults (mean [SD] age 19.0 [5.1] years; 74.6% female) who met the International Classification of Headache Disorders, third edition criteria for primary headache disorders (46.6% episodic migraine, 11.6% chronic migraine, 38.3% episodic tension‐type headache, 3.5% chronic tension‐type headache) and completed measures assessing psychological factors and headache‐related disability. Headache, psychiatric symptoms, and transdiagnostic factors were examined in relation to headache‐related disability, after controlling for sex. Moderation analyses examined the conditional effect of diagnosis on disability.ResultsAs predicted, both psychiatric and transdiagnostic symptoms accounted for unique variance in headache‐related disability beyond headache symptoms (R2 changes of 2.7% and 2.3%, respectively). Significant three‐way interactions revealed the relationship between psychiatric symptoms and disability (b = −3.16, p = 0.002), and between transdiagnostic variables and disability (b = −2.37, p = 0.034). Tests of simple slopes showed greater psychiatric symptoms and transdiagnostic variables were associated with higher levels of disability. However, the associations of these variables with disability were strongest among individuals with chronic tension‐type headache (B = 3.93 for psychiatric symptoms and B = 4.62 for transdiagnostic symptoms, both p < 0.001).ConclusionPsychiatric and transdiagnostic factors contribute uniquely to headache‐related functional impairment, which may be important for expanding targeted assessment and behavioral interventions.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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