We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
The impact of headache specialist density and the introduction of gepants and lasmitidan on prescriptions for acute migraine treatments: a regression and interrupted time series analysis.
- Authors
Moskatel, Leon S.; Linfield, Rebecca Y.; Zhang, Niushen
- Abstract
Background: Understanding all factors that affect a patient's acute migraine treatment care is crucial. We sought to determine the impact of headache specialist density and the introduction of the gepants and lasmiditan on the prescription of acute treatments for migraine. Methods: We analyzed three scenarios: first, we performed linear regression analysis with the percentage of patients with migraine prescribed an acute medication in 2023, obtained via Epic Cosmos, and the density of headache specialists at the state level. Second, we conducted interrupted time-series analysis examining the change in patients prescribed the triptans before (2016–2019) and after (2020–2023) the introduction of the gepants and lasmiditan. Finally, we used regression analysis to look at the association of one pharmaceutical company, Pfizer, payments to physicians with prescriptions for that company's gepant, rimegepant. Results: We included 6,559,854 patients with migraine and found that increased headache specialist density was associated with increased eletriptan, almotriptan, and naratriptan; there was no association with the other queried acute medications. In our interrupted time-series analysis, the introduction of the gepants and lasmiditan was linked to decreases in triptan utilization, except for eletriptan which remained stable, and rizatriptan which rose at a slower rate. Finally, increased Pfizer payments to physicians were associated with a higher percentage of patients prescribed rimegepant. Conclusion: Our study suggests increased headache provider availability is associated with more prescriptions for naratriptan, eletriptan, and almotriptan. Additionally, the introduction of the gepants and lasmiditan broadly decreased the utilization of triptans. Critically, there was a strong association between a pharmaceutical company's, Pfizer, payments to physicians and utilization of their medication, rimegepant.
- Subjects
TIME series analysis; PHYSICIANS; MIGRAINE; REGRESSION analysis; LINEAR statistical models
- Publication
Frontiers in Neurology, 2025, p1
- ISSN
1664-2295
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.3389/fneur.2025.1530499