Tracking Migraine Symptoms: A Longitudinal Comparison of Smartphone-Based Headache Diaries and Clinical Interviews.

IF 3.2 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Nicolas Vandenbussche, Jonas Van Der Donckt, Mathias De Brouwer, Bram Steenwinckel, Marija Stojchevska, Femke Ongenae, Sofie Van Hoecke, Koen Paemeleire
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Abstract

Background/Objectives: By leveraging the capabilities of a smartphone-based headache diary, the objective of this study was to determine the amount of agreement between migraine-associated symptomatology during headache events and the symptoms documented during clinician-led intake interviews. Methods: This was a 90-day longitudinal, smartphone-based headache calendar study for participants diagnosed with migraine. Registered headache events were labeled as "definite migraine", "probable migraine", and "not migraine" in accordance with the International Classification of Headache Disorders, Third Edition (ICHD-3) criteria. Symptoms' agreement with clinician-led intake interviews (agreement percentages and kappa coefficients), symptoms' similarity between headache events within users (percentage), and amount of newly registered ICHD-3 symptoms per participant were calculated. Results: Twenty-seven participants provided 505 headache events eligible for analysis. The median agreement between recorded headache event symptomatology and clinician-led intake interview phenotyping ranged between 40% (for events fulfilling "not migraine" criteria) and 55.5% ("definite migraine") (p < 0.001). Higher intraparticipant headache event pair similarity was observed for "definite migraine" pairs (p < 0.01), along with a decreasing trend in similarity as the attack-pair headache distance increases. Over half of the participants registered at least one new ICHD-3 symptom during the study. Conclusions: Electronic diary registrations show substantial longitudinal variability in intrapersonal headache symptomatology, with the similarity of headache events declining over time. The registration of a new ICHD-3 symptom was the rule rather than the exception.

跟踪偏头痛症状:基于智能手机的头痛日记和临床访谈的纵向比较。
背景/目的:通过利用基于智能手机的头痛日记功能,本研究的目的是确定头痛事件期间偏头痛相关症状与临床医生主导的入院访谈期间记录的症状之间的一致性。方法:对诊断为偏头痛的参与者进行为期90天的纵向、基于智能手机的头痛日历研究。根据国际头痛疾病分类第三版(ICHD-3)的标准,登记的头痛事件被标记为“明确偏头痛”、“可能偏头痛”和“非偏头痛”。计算症状与临床医生主导的入院访谈的一致性(一致性百分比和kappa系数),使用者头痛事件之间症状的相似性(百分比),以及每个参与者新登记的ICHD-3症状的数量。结果:27名受试者提供505例符合分析条件的头痛事件。记录的头痛事件症状学和临床医生主导的摄入访谈表型之间的中位一致性在40%(满足“非偏头痛”标准的事件)和55.5%(“明确偏头痛”)之间(p < 0.001)。“明确偏头痛”组的头痛事件对相似度较高(p < 0.01),随着攻击对头痛距离的增加,相似度呈下降趋势。在研究期间,超过一半的参与者至少出现了一种新的ICHD-3症状。结论:电子日记登记显示了个人头痛症状的纵向变异性,头痛事件的相似性随着时间的推移而下降。新的ICHD-3症状的登记是规则而不是例外。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neurology International
Neurology International CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
3.30%
发文量
69
审稿时长
11 weeks
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