SAN DIEGO — Healthy women aged 45 years and older who have migraine with aura have a significantly increased risk of coronary heart disease, myocardial infarction, coronary revascularization, and angina, results from the largest study of its kind demonstrated.
On the other hand, migraine without aura was not associated with any such outcome, Dr. Tobias Kurth reported at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology. “Since migraine without aura is far more common than migraine with aura, for most migraine patients our data indicate no increased risk of coronary heart disease,” said Dr. Kurth of the preventive medicine division at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston.
Dr. Richard B. Lipton, who was invited to discuss the work, said the findings warrant being vigilant for coronary heart disease (CHD) risk factors in patients who have migraine with aura. This would include working with patients to modify CHD risk factors, noted Dr. Lipton, vice chair of neurology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York. “It may be possible to devise risk factor modification strategies that might include aspirin or folate,” he said.
In a study funded by the National Institutes of Health, Dr. Kurth and his associates followed 27,840 women aged 45 years and older who were enrolled in the Women's Health Study. All study participants were free of cardiovascular disease at baseline. The researchers used a Cox proportional hazards model to evaluate the association between migraine and risk of subsequent CHD and angina, while adjusting for cardiovascular risk factors including age, blood pressure, smoking status, body mass index, alcohol consumption, and exercise habits. The average follow-up was 10 years. “All women were age 45 or older, health professionals, and mostly white,” Dr. Kurth added.
In the baseline questionnaire study, participants were asked if they ever had a migraine, and if they had a migraine in the previous year. “If the woman answered yes to the latter question, we asked further details about her migraine, including a question about aura,” Dr. Kurth said. Women who did not report migraine served as the referent group.
At baseline, 5,125 (18%) reported a history of migraine and 3,610 (13%) reported current migraine. Of those who reported current migraine, 1,434 (40%) reported aura.
During 10 years of follow-up, 625 coronary heart disease events and 408 angina events occurred.
Compared with women who reported no history of migraine, women who reported migraine with aura had a 1.7-fold increased risk for CHD; a 2-fold increased risk for myocardial infarction; a 1.7-fold increased risk for coronary revascularization; and a 1.7-fold increased risk for angina. On average, the risk for all of these factors reached statistical significance in the sixth year of follow-up, said Dr. Kurth, also of Harvard Medical School, Boston.
Migraineurs without aura had no increased risk for any of the outcome events.
The findings warrant being vigilant for CHD risk factors in all patients who have migraine with aura. DR. LIPTON