Suppr超能文献

偏头痛预防的行为干预措施:一项系统评价与荟萃分析。

Behavioral interventions for migraine prevention: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

作者信息

Treadwell Jonathan R, Tsou Amy Y, Rouse Benjamin, Ivlev Ilya, Fricke Julie, Buse Dawn C, Powers Scott W, Minen Mia, Szperka Christina L, Mull Nikhil K

机构信息

ECRI, Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania, USA.

Pacific Northwest Evidence-Based Practice Center, Portland, Oregon, USA.

出版信息

Headache. 2025 Apr;65(4):668-694. doi: 10.1111/head.14914. Epub 2025 Feb 19.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES/BACKGROUND: This study was undertaken to synthesize evidence on the benefits and harms of behavioral interventions for migraine prevention in children and adults. The efficacy and safety of behavioral interventions for migraine prevention have not been tested in recent systematic reviews.

METHODS

An expert panel including clinical psychologists, neurologists, primary care physicians, researchers, funders, individuals with migraine, and their caregivers informed the scope and methods. We searched MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, PubMed, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, clinicaltrials.gov, and gray literature for English-language randomized trials (January 1, 1975 to August 24, 2023) of behavioral interventions for preventing migraine attacks. Primary outcomes were migraine/headache frequency, migraine disability, and migraine-related quality of life. One reviewer extracted data and rated the risk of bias, and a second verified data for completeness and accuracy. Data were synthesized with meta-analysis when deemed appropriate, and we rated the strength of evidence (SOE) using established methods.

RESULTS

For adults, we included 50 trials (77 publications, N = 6024 adults). Most interventions were multicomponent (e.g., cognitive behavioral therapy [CBT], biofeedback, relaxation training, mindfulness-based therapies, and/or education). Most trials were at high risk of bias, primarily due to possible measurement bias and incomplete data. For adults, we found that any of three components (CBT, relaxation training, mindfulness-based therapies) may reduce migraine/headache attack frequency (SOE: low). Education alone that targets behavior may improve migraine-related disability (SOE: low). For three other interventions (biofeedback, acceptance and commitment therapy, and hypnotherapy), evidence was insufficient to permit conclusions. We also found that mindfulness-based therapies may reduce migraine disability more than education, and relaxation + education may improve migraine-related quality of life more than propranolol (SOE: low). For children/adolescents, we included 13 trials (16 publications, N = 1444 children), but the evidence was only sufficient to conclude that CBT + biofeedback + relaxation training may reduce migraine attack frequency and disability more than education alone (SOE: low).

CONCLUSION

Results suggest that for adults, CBT, relaxation training, and mindfulness-based therapies may each reduce the frequency of migraine/headache attacks, and education alone may reduce disability. For children/adolescents, CBT + biofeedback + relaxation training may reduce migraine attack frequency and disability more than education alone. Evidence consisted primarily of underpowered trials of multicomponent interventions compared with various types of control groups. Limitations include semantic inconsistencies in the literature since 1975, differential usage of treatment components, expectation effects for subjectively reported outcomes, incomplete data, and unclear dosing effects. Future research should enroll children and adolescents, standardize intervention components when possible to improve reproducibility, consider smart study designs and personalized therapies based on individual characteristics, use comparison groups that control for expectation, which is a known challenge in behavioral trials, enroll and retain larger samples, study emerging digital and telehealth modes of care delivery, improve the completeness of data collection, and establish or update clinical trial conduct and reporting guidelines that are appropriate for the conduct of studies of behavioral therapies.

摘要

目的/背景:本研究旨在综合关于儿童和成人偏头痛预防行为干预的益处和危害的证据。行为干预预防偏头痛的有效性和安全性在最近的系统评价中尚未得到检验。

方法

一个由临床心理学家、神经科医生、初级保健医生、研究人员、资助者、偏头痛患者及其护理人员组成的专家小组确定了研究范围和方法。我们在MEDLINE、Embase、PsycINFO、PubMed、Cochrane系统评价数据库、clinicaltrials.gov以及灰色文献中检索了1975年1月1日至2023年8月24日期间关于预防偏头痛发作行为干预的英文随机试验。主要结局包括偏头痛/头痛频率、偏头痛残疾程度以及与偏头痛相关的生活质量。一名评审员提取数据并评估偏倚风险,另一名评审员核实数据的完整性和准确性。在认为适当时,采用荟萃分析对数据进行综合,并使用既定方法评估证据强度(SOE)。

结果

对于成人,我们纳入了50项试验(77篇出版物,N = 6024名成人)。大多数干预措施是多成分的(例如,认知行为疗法[CBT]、生物反馈、放松训练、正念疗法和/或教育)。大多数试验存在较高的偏倚风险,主要是由于可能的测量偏倚和数据不完整。对于成人,我们发现三种成分(CBT、放松训练、正念疗法)中的任何一种都可能降低偏头痛/头痛发作频率(SOE:低)。仅针对行为的教育可能改善与偏头痛相关的残疾程度(SOE:低)。对于其他三种干预措施(生物反馈、接受与承诺疗法和催眠疗法),证据不足以得出结论。我们还发现,正念疗法可能比教育更能降低偏头痛残疾程度,放松训练 + 教育可能比普萘洛尔更能改善与偏头痛相关的生活质量(SOE:低)。对于儿童/青少年,我们纳入了13项试验(16篇出版物,N = 1444名儿童),但证据仅足以得出结论:CBT + 生物反馈 + 放松训练可能比单纯教育更能降低偏头痛发作频率和残疾程度(SOE:低)。

结论

结果表明,对于成人,CBT、放松训练和正念疗法可能各自降低偏头痛/头痛发作频率,仅教育可能降低残疾程度。对于儿童/青少年,CBT + 生物反馈 + 放松训练可能比单纯教育更能降低偏头痛发作频率和残疾程度。证据主要由与各种类型对照组相比的多成分干预的效能不足的试验组成。局限性包括自1975年以来文献中的语义不一致、治疗成分的不同用法、主观报告结局的期望效应、数据不完整以及剂量效应不明确。未来的研究应纳入儿童和青少年,尽可能标准化干预成分以提高可重复性,考虑基于个体特征的智能研究设计和个性化疗法,使用控制期望的对照组(这是行为试验中一个已知的挑战),纳入并保留更大的样本,研究新兴的数字和远程医疗护理模式,提高数据收集的完整性,并建立或更新适合行为疗法研究开展的临床试验实施和报告指南。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/aaec/11951403/e5bb42492744/HEAD-65-668-g005.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验