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Practice and Economics Cost Considerations in Headache Treatment Part 1: Prophylactic Migraine Treatment
Authors:James U. Adelman  MD   Randal Von Seggern  PharmD
Affiliation:From the Adelman Headache Center, Greensboro, NC.
Abstract:Effective migraine treatment is clearly the most cost-effective in terms of both direct and indirect costs. Patient education, behavior changes, and prudent medication selection can minimize costs. Low-dose aspirin may reduce headache frequency. Among the antidepressant medications used, amitriptyine 25 mg, 3 qhs ($4.16/month) and doxepin 25 mg, 3 qhs ($10.50/month) remain the standard. Imipramine (25 mg, 3 qhs ($3.75/month) is very inexpensive and should replace nortriptyline 25 mg, 3 qhs ($64.29/month) as a second-line agent. The specific serotonin reuptake inhibitors are expensive and have no proven effect for migraine prevention.
Propranolol 80 mg bid ($7.80/month) is inexpensive and frequently a good choice among beta-blockers. Atenolol 100 mg qd ($27.50/month) is less expensive than long-acting propranolol 160 mg ($35.56/month) and nadolol 120 mg qd ($43.68/month) with equivalent effectiveness. It is thus recommended as the ong-acting beta-blocker of choice. Sustained-release preparations of verapamil 240 mg qd ($31.98/ month) are twice the cost and less well-absorbed than the standard preparation of 120 mg bid ($17.62/month).
Better information is needed concerning effectiveness and optimal dosing of some older low-cost medications in the preventive treatment of migraine.
Keywords:migraine    migraine preventive treatment    medication cost    treatment cost    headache    cost-effective
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