Adults with migraine seem to benefit from psychological interventions, according to a meta-analysis published online Feb. 5 in Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain.
Noting that a recently published review showed no strong evidence for psychological intervention for adults with migraine but that the review was limited by stringent inclusion criteria, Joanne Dudeney, Ph.D., from Macquarie University in Sydney, and colleagues examined the stability of these findings. After systematically searching databases, 39 randomized controlled trials, with 3,155 participants, were included in the meta-analysis. Thirty-one of the trials included data on migraine only and eight combined data for adults with migraine or tension-type headache.
The researchers found that compared with controls, psychological interventions had a small-to-medium beneficial effect on improving migraine frequency, pain intensity (Cohen’s d range, 0.23 to 0.33), and disability at follow-up (d = 0.44). No evidence of a beneficial effect on quality-of-life posttreatment was seen, nor on mood at posttreatment or follow-up. In sensitivity analyses on studies with mixed headache populations, for most outcomes, the magnitude of effect was similar (d range, 0.25 to 0.36), except for mood, which yielded a small-to-medium beneficial effect (d = 0.32).
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