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Migraine Genetic Susceptibility Does Not Strongly Influence Migraine Characteristics and Outcomes in a Treated, Real-World, Community Cohort.

Authors :
Chase, Bruce A.
Frigerio, Roberta
Rubin, Susan
Semenov, Irene
Meyers, Steven
Mark, Angela
Freedom, Thomas
Marcus, Revital
Dafer, Rima
Wei, Jun
Zheng, Siqun L.
Xu, Jianfeng
Mulford, Ashley J.
Sanders, Alan R.
Pham, Anna
Epshteyn, Alexander
Maraganore, Demetrius
Markopoulou, Katerina
Source :
Journal of Clinical Medicine. Jan2025, Vol. 14 Issue 2, p536. 37p.
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

Background/Objectives: Migraine is a common neurological disorder with highly variable characteristics. While genome-wide association studies have identified genetic risk factors that implicate underlying pathways, the influence of genetic susceptibility on disease characteristics or treatment response is incompletely understood. We examined the relationships between a previously developed standardized integrative migraine polygenic genetic risk score (PRS) and migraine characteristics in a real-world, treated patient cohort. Methods: This retrospective cohort study used covariate-adjusted regression to comprehensively evaluate associations between the PRS and clinical characteristics in 1653 treated migraine cases with European ancestry at baseline and, in 800 cases, after one year. Cases were deeply phenotyped by neurologists during extensive interviews, using structured clinical documentation tools to record ~200 discrete data elements. Results: In treated patients, higher standardized PRS showed associations with two common migraine symptoms: photophobia (odds ratio [confidence interval]: 1.33 [1.13–1.56], p = 0.001) and stabbing pain (1.21 [1.08–1.36], p = 0.001]; both retained significance at Q = 0.05. Associations with phonophobia, nausea, emesis, and unilateral headache had similar effect sizes but did not survive correction for multiple tests. In this population, the PRS was not associated with other symptoms of migraine attacks, objective measures of migraine disability, frequency, severity, average duration, time-to-peak intensity of migraine attacks, chronification, emergency department visits, triptan responsiveness, or changes at follow-up. Conclusions: In treated patients, genetic risk was associated with common migraine symptoms but not with the severity of migraine characteristics or treatment outcomes. This suggests that in treated patients, other genetic and non-genetic factors influence migraine symptom severity and disease course more strongly than genetic susceptibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20770383
Volume :
14
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
182477242
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14020536