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Target Migraine

Contents

Introduction

Migraine is as old as human history and clear descriptions of it can be recognised in Babylonian manuscripts dating back to 3000 BC, and even more clearly in Egyptian papyri from 1550 BC. It is a very common condition, affecting one person in ten during their lifetime in the UK, or an estimated 5 to 6 million people. Most patients experience migraine attacks with intervals in between, when they are completely well, though the number of attacks each year varies enormously from person to person. So it is an episodic disorder rather than a chronic illness. It does not cause continuous disability in most people and is not generally associated with a reduced life expectancy. For these reasons, it has not been taken as seriously as it should have been, either by the medical profession or the general public.

  • This picture has begun to improve in the past decade, driven by a number of developments, including:
  • the introduction by the International Headache Society of carefully constructed criteria for diagnosing migraine and other types of headaches,
  • studies which show the serious impact that migraine has on those who experience it,
  • the proof that blood flow patterns to the brain change during an attack,
  • the discovery that there are genetic factors linked to migraine, and
  • the development by the pharmaceutical industry of specific and effective medicines for migraine.

Migraine must not be underrated. It is a cause of considerable human suffering, has a real impact on performance at work, and can seriously disrupt family and social relationships. The attacks are responsible for inhibited careers, restricted social lives and broken relationships. A study of migraine-related disability has shown that it equals or exceeds the functional impairment caused by other common chronic illnesses such as high blood pressure, osteoarthritis, diabetes and depression. Many people who have migraine find that it affects them between attacks as well – for example, because they worry that they may let other people down, or that they may lose their jobs, or simply because of the fear of the next attack coming.

The current annual financial burden of migraine in the UK is said by the Migraine Action Association and the Migraine Trust to be about £750 million a year. Only 4 to 5 per cent of this is direct medicines costs, and hospitalisation is relatively uncommon for migraine. Rather, the bulk is due to lost time – some 18 million days a year estimated for the UK – and decreased efficiency at work.

A large study carried out in the USA found that migraine sufferers miss an average of four to eight days’ work a year because of their attacks. The efficiency of those at work fell by up to two-thirds. This burden could be greatly reduced with the appropriate use of modern medicines and it is disappointing that the new Department of Health computerised decision support system for doctors – Prodigy – lists only one of the new class of medicines, the triptans, for the treatment of migraine, despite the existence of several medicines with different properties. A wider choice of migraine medicines is important in improving the quality of life for sufferers. Even if cost is the most important factor, studies have clearly shown that the cost of prescribing these new medicines would be more than offset by a gain in productivity.

It is hoped that this booklet will contribute to both patient and public awareness of migraine, and engender a greater degree of understanding towards those affected by it. It should also provide a non-technical insight into what is currently known about the causes of migraine and what is being done in the pharmaceutical industry to improve the available treatments.

 

 

Acknowledgements

The ABPI thanks member companies for the information provided in the preparation of this booklet. We are also indebted to the Migraine Trust for help and advice and the Migraine Action Association for help, advice and permission to use pictures from their Migraine Art collection. Other illustrations gratefully acknowledged are from AstraZeneca and Innovative Medical Research (MIDAS form), Glaxo Wellcome (3D picture of the head), SmithKline Beecham for the sequence showing cortical spreading depression, and the Science Photo Library. The scan of blood flow in the brain stem is reproduced with permission from Migraine Pharmacology and Genetics, (Eds: Sandler, Ferrari & Harnett, published by Altman Publishers). May 2000.

 
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