Patient‐reported experiences with migraine‐related cognitive symptoms: Results of the MiCOAS qualitative study

Author:

Gerstein Maya T.1ORCID,Wirth R. J.2,Uzumcu Alyssa A.1,Houts Carrie R.2,McGinley James S.2,Buse Dawn C.23,McCarrier Kelly P.1,Cooke Alexis1,Touba Nancy M.1,Nishida Tracy K.2,Goadsby Peter J.45,Dodick David W.67ORCID,Lipton Richard B.38ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Patient Centered Outcomes OPEN Health Group Bethesda Maryland USA

2. Vector Psychometric Group, LLC Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

3. Albert Einstein College of Medicine Bronx New York USA

4. NIHR SLaM King's Clinical Research Facility King's College London London UK

5. Department of Neurology University of California Los Angeles California USA

6. Department of Neurology Mayo Clinic Scottsdale Arizona USA

7. Atria Institute New York New York USA

8. Montefiore Medical Center Bronx New York USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesTo capture patients' perspectives on migraine‐related cognitive symptoms during pre‐headache, headache, post‐headache, and interictal periods.BackgroundMigraine‐related cognitive symptoms are reported by people with migraine both during and between attacks. Associated with disability, they are increasingly viewed as a priority target for treatment. The Migraine Clinical Outcome Assessment System (MiCOAS) project is focused on developing a patient‐centered core set of outcome measures for the evaluation of migraine treatments. The project focuses on incorporating the experience of people living with migraine and the outcomes most meaningful to them. This includes an examination of the presence and functional impact of migraine‐related cognitive symptoms and their perceived impact on quality of life and disability.MethodsForty individuals with self‐reported medically diagnosed migraine were recruited via iterative purposeful sampling for semi‐structured qualitative interviews conducted using audio‐only web conferencing. Thematic content analysis was performed to identify key concepts around migraine‐related cognitive symptoms. Recruitment continued until concept saturation was achieved.ResultsParticipants described symptoms consistent with migraine‐related deficits in language/speech, sustained attention, executive function, and memory that manifest during pre‐headache (36/40 [90%] reported ≥1 cognitive feature), headache (35/40 [88%] reported ≥1 cognitive feature), post‐headache (27/40 [68%] reported ≥1 cognitive feature), and interictal periods (13/40 [33%] reported ≥1 cognitive feature). Among participants reporting cognitive symptoms during pre‐headache, 32/40 (81%) endorsed 2–5 cognitive symptoms. Findings were similar during the headache phase. Participants reported language/speech problems consistent with, for example, impairments in receptive language, expressive language, and articulation. Issues with sustained attention included fogginess, confusion/disorientation, and trouble with concentration/focus. Deficits in executive function included difficulty processing information and reduced capacity for planning and decision‐making. Memory issues were reported across all phases of the migraine attack.ConclusionsThis patient‐level qualitative study suggests that cognitive symptoms are common for persons with migraine, particularly in the pre‐headache and headache phases. These findings highlight the importance of assessing and ameliorating these cognitive problems.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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