Trajectory of health care resources among adults stopping or reducing treatment frequency of botulinum toxin for chronic migraine treatment in Alberta, Canada
Lawrence Richer, Huong Luu, Karen J. B. Martins, Khanh Vu, Alexis Guigue, Kai On Wong, Phuong Uyen Nguyen, Thilinie Rajapakse, Tyler Williamson, Scott W. Klarenbach- Neurology (clinical)
- Neurology
Abstract
Objective
Understand health resource, medication use, and cost of adults with chronic migraine who received guideline‐recommended onabotulinumtoxinA (botulinum toxin) treatment frequency and then continued or reduced/stopped.
Background
Botulinum toxin may be a beneficial treatment for chronic migraine; the trajectory of health resources utilization among those with continued or reduced/stopped use is unclear.
Methods
A retrospective population‐based cohort study utilizing administrative data from Alberta, Canada (2012–2020), was performed. A cohort of adults who received ≥5 botulinum toxin treatment cycles for chronic migraine over 18 months (6‐month run‐in; 1‐year pre‐index period) were grouped into those who (1) continued use (≥3 treatments/year), or (2) stopped or reduced use (stopped for 6 months then received 0 or 1–2 treatments/year, respectively) over a 1‐year post‐index period. Health resources and medication use were described, and pre–post costs were assessed. A second cohort that received ≥3 treatments/year immediately followed by 1 year of stopped or reduced use was considered in sensitivity analysis.
Results
Pre–post health resource, medication use, and costs were similar among those with continued use (n = 3336). Among those who stopped or reduced use (n = 1099; 756 stopped, 343 reduced), health resource, medication use, and costs were lower in the post‐ (total median per‐person cost [IQR]: all‐cause $4851 [$8090]; migraine‐related $835 [$1915]) versus pre‐ (all‐cause $6096 [$7207]; migraine‐related $2995 [$1950]) index period (estimated cost ratios [95% CI]: total all‐cause 0.86 [0.79, 0.95]; total migraine‐related 0.44 [0.40, 0.48]). In the second cohort (n = 3763), return to continued use (≥3 treatments/year) occurred in up to 70.4% in those with reduced use.
Conclusions
Of adults treated with botulinum toxin for chronic migraine, 75.2% had continued use, stable health resource and medication use, and costs over a 2 year period. In those that stopped/reduced use, the observed lower health resource and migraine medication use may indicate improved symptom control, but the resumption of guideline‐recommended treatment intervals after reduced use was common.