Comparison of a pediatric practice-based therapy and an interdisciplinary ambulatory treatment in social pediatric centers for migraine in children: a nation-wide randomized-controlled trial in Germany: “moma – modules on migraine activity”

Abstract Background Migraine is common in childhood, peaks in adolescents and persists into adulthood in at least 40% of patients. There is need for early interventions to improve the burden of disease and, if possible, reduce chronification. The aim of the project is to compare two types of ambulat...

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Main Authors: Mirjam N. Landgraf, Florian Heinen, Lucia Gerstl, Christine Kainz, Ruth Ruscheweyh, Andreas Straube, Joerg Scheidt, Sabine von Mutius, Viola Obermeier, Ruediger von Kries
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-06-01
Series:BMC Pediatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-021-02757-2
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language English
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author Mirjam N. Landgraf
Florian Heinen
Lucia Gerstl
Christine Kainz
Ruth Ruscheweyh
Andreas Straube
Joerg Scheidt
Sabine von Mutius
Viola Obermeier
Ruediger von Kries
spellingShingle Mirjam N. Landgraf
Florian Heinen
Lucia Gerstl
Christine Kainz
Ruth Ruscheweyh
Andreas Straube
Joerg Scheidt
Sabine von Mutius
Viola Obermeier
Ruediger von Kries
Comparison of a pediatric practice-based therapy and an interdisciplinary ambulatory treatment in social pediatric centers for migraine in children: a nation-wide randomized-controlled trial in Germany: “moma – modules on migraine activity”
BMC Pediatrics
Migraine
Children
Intervention
Interdisciplinary
Pediatric practice
author_facet Mirjam N. Landgraf
Florian Heinen
Lucia Gerstl
Christine Kainz
Ruth Ruscheweyh
Andreas Straube
Joerg Scheidt
Sabine von Mutius
Viola Obermeier
Ruediger von Kries
author_sort Mirjam N. Landgraf
title Comparison of a pediatric practice-based therapy and an interdisciplinary ambulatory treatment in social pediatric centers for migraine in children: a nation-wide randomized-controlled trial in Germany: “moma – modules on migraine activity”
title_short Comparison of a pediatric practice-based therapy and an interdisciplinary ambulatory treatment in social pediatric centers for migraine in children: a nation-wide randomized-controlled trial in Germany: “moma – modules on migraine activity”
title_full Comparison of a pediatric practice-based therapy and an interdisciplinary ambulatory treatment in social pediatric centers for migraine in children: a nation-wide randomized-controlled trial in Germany: “moma – modules on migraine activity”
title_fullStr Comparison of a pediatric practice-based therapy and an interdisciplinary ambulatory treatment in social pediatric centers for migraine in children: a nation-wide randomized-controlled trial in Germany: “moma – modules on migraine activity”
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of a pediatric practice-based therapy and an interdisciplinary ambulatory treatment in social pediatric centers for migraine in children: a nation-wide randomized-controlled trial in Germany: “moma – modules on migraine activity”
title_sort comparison of a pediatric practice-based therapy and an interdisciplinary ambulatory treatment in social pediatric centers for migraine in children: a nation-wide randomized-controlled trial in germany: “moma – modules on migraine activity”
publisher BMC
series BMC Pediatrics
issn 1471-2431
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract Background Migraine is common in childhood, peaks in adolescents and persists into adulthood in at least 40% of patients. There is need for early interventions to improve the burden of disease and, if possible, reduce chronification. The aim of the project is to compare two types of ambulatory treatment strategies regarding their effect on headache days and quality of life in 6 to 11 year old children with migraine: 1) the routine care in pediatricians’ practices (intervention group A) and 2) a structured interdisciplinary multimodal intervention administered at social pediatric centers (intervention group B). Methods The study is a nation-wide cluster-randomized study. Based on the postal codes the regions are randomly assigned to the two intervention-strategies. Children with migraine are recruited in the pediatric practices, as common outpatient-care in the German health-care system. Parents rate headache frequency, intensity and acute medication intake at a daily basis via a digital smartphone application specifically designed for the study. Migraine-related disability and quality of life are assessed every 3 months. Study duration is 9 months for every participant: 3 months of baseline at the pediatric practice (both groups); 3 months of intervention at the pediatric practice (intervention group A) or at the social pediatric center (intervention group B), respectively; 3 months of follow-up at the pediatric practice (both groups). Discussion Results of the planned comparison of routine care in pediatric practices and interdisciplinary social pediatric centers will be relevant for treatment of children with migraine, both for the individual and for the health care system. Trial registration The study was approved by the ethics committee at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich (number 18–804) and was retrospectively registered on 27 April 2021 in the WHO approved German Clinical Trials Register (number DRKS00016698 ).
topic Migraine
Children
Intervention
Interdisciplinary
Pediatric practice
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-021-02757-2
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spelling doaj-53c55271d2414537bfe50be9e742b1472021-07-04T11:44:15ZengBMCBMC Pediatrics1471-24312021-06-012111810.1186/s12887-021-02757-2Comparison of a pediatric practice-based therapy and an interdisciplinary ambulatory treatment in social pediatric centers for migraine in children: a nation-wide randomized-controlled trial in Germany: “moma – modules on migraine activity”Mirjam N. Landgraf0Florian Heinen1Lucia Gerstl2Christine Kainz3Ruth Ruscheweyh4Andreas Straube5Joerg Scheidt6Sabine von Mutius7Viola Obermeier8Ruediger von Kries9Department for Neuropediatrics, Developmental Medicine and Social Pediatrics, LMU Center for Development and Children with Medical Complexity – iSPZ Hauner, Dr. von Haunersches Kinderspital, Kinderklinik und Kinderpoliklink der Ludwig Maximilians Universitat MunchenDepartment for Neuropediatrics, Developmental Medicine and Social Pediatrics, LMU Center for Development and Children with Medical Complexity – iSPZ Hauner, Dr. von Haunersches Kinderspital, Kinderklinik und Kinderpoliklink der Ludwig Maximilians Universitat MunchenDepartment for Neuropediatrics, Developmental Medicine and Social Pediatrics, LMU Center for Development and Children with Medical Complexity – iSPZ Hauner, Dr. von Haunersches Kinderspital, Kinderklinik und Kinderpoliklink der Ludwig Maximilians Universitat MunchenDepartment for Neuropediatrics, Developmental Medicine and Social Pediatrics, LMU Center for Development and Children with Medical Complexity – iSPZ Hauner, Dr. von Haunersches Kinderspital, Kinderklinik und Kinderpoliklink der Ludwig Maximilians Universitat MunchenDepartment of Neurology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat MunchenDepartment of Neurology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat MunchenHochschule Hof, Institute of Information SystemsLudwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen, Institute for Social Pediatrics and Adolescent MedicineLudwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen, Institute for Social Pediatrics and Adolescent MedicineLudwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen, Institute for Social Pediatrics and Adolescent MedicineAbstract Background Migraine is common in childhood, peaks in adolescents and persists into adulthood in at least 40% of patients. There is need for early interventions to improve the burden of disease and, if possible, reduce chronification. The aim of the project is to compare two types of ambulatory treatment strategies regarding their effect on headache days and quality of life in 6 to 11 year old children with migraine: 1) the routine care in pediatricians’ practices (intervention group A) and 2) a structured interdisciplinary multimodal intervention administered at social pediatric centers (intervention group B). Methods The study is a nation-wide cluster-randomized study. Based on the postal codes the regions are randomly assigned to the two intervention-strategies. Children with migraine are recruited in the pediatric practices, as common outpatient-care in the German health-care system. Parents rate headache frequency, intensity and acute medication intake at a daily basis via a digital smartphone application specifically designed for the study. Migraine-related disability and quality of life are assessed every 3 months. Study duration is 9 months for every participant: 3 months of baseline at the pediatric practice (both groups); 3 months of intervention at the pediatric practice (intervention group A) or at the social pediatric center (intervention group B), respectively; 3 months of follow-up at the pediatric practice (both groups). Discussion Results of the planned comparison of routine care in pediatric practices and interdisciplinary social pediatric centers will be relevant for treatment of children with migraine, both for the individual and for the health care system. Trial registration The study was approved by the ethics committee at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich (number 18–804) and was retrospectively registered on 27 April 2021 in the WHO approved German Clinical Trials Register (number DRKS00016698 ).https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-021-02757-2MigraineChildrenInterventionInterdisciplinaryPediatric practice