The Journal of Headache and Pain (Jul 2022)

Gradually shifting clinical phenomics in migraine spectrum: a cross-sectional, multicenter study of 5438 patients

  • Ye Ran,
  • Ziming Yin,
  • Yajun Lian,
  • Yanmei Xu,
  • Yajie Li,
  • Jiale Liu,
  • Qun Gu,
  • Fanhong Yan,
  • Zhaoli Ge,
  • Yu Lian,
  • Dongmei Hu,
  • Sufen Chen,
  • Yangyang Wang,
  • Xiaolin Wang,
  • Rongfei Wang,
  • Xiaoyan Chen,
  • Jing Liu,
  • Mingjie Zhang,
  • Xun Han,
  • Wei Xie,
  • Zhe Yu,
  • Ya Cao,
  • Yingji Li,
  • Ke Li,
  • Zhao Dong,
  • Shengyuan Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s10194-022-01461-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background The aim of the study was to investigate whether MwoA and MwA are different manifestations of a single disease, distinct clinical entities, or located at two poles of a spectrum. Methods In this cross-sectional study, 5438 patients from 10 hospitals in China were included: 4651 were diagnosed with migraine without aura (MwoA) and 787 with migraine with aura (MwA). We used a validated standardized electronic survey to collect multidimensional data on headache characteristics and evaluated the similarities and differences between migraine subtypes. To distinguish migraine subtypes, we employed correlational analysis, factor analysis of mixed data (FAMD), and decision tree analysis. Results Compared to MwA, MwoA had more severe headaches, predominantly affected females, were more easily produced by external factors, and were more likely to have accompanying symptoms and premonitory neck stiffness. Patients with MwA are heterogeneous, according to correlation analysis; FAMD divided the subjects into three clear clusters. The majority of the differences between MwoA and MwA were likewise seen when typical aura with migraine headache (AWM) and typical aura with non-migraine headache (AWNM) were compared. Furthermore, decision trees analysis revealed that the chaotic MwA data reduced the decision tree’s accuracy in distinguishing MwoA from MwA, which was significantly increased by splitting MwA into AWM and AWNM. Conclusions The clinical phenomics of headache phenotype varies gradually from MwoA to AWM and AWNM, and AWM is a mid-state between MwoA and AWNM. We tend to regard migraine as a spectrum disorder, and speculate that different migraine subtypes have different “predominant regions” that generate attacks.

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