Migraine in children and adults born preterm : a nationwide register linkage study
Strang-Karlsson, Sonja; Alenius, Suvi; Näsänen-Gilmore, Pieta; Nurhonen, Markku; Haaramo, Peija; Evensen, Kari Anne I.; Vääräsmäki, Marja; Gissler, Mika; Hovi, Petteri; Kajantie, Eero (2020-12-09)
Strang-Karlsson, S., Alenius, S., Näsänen-Gilmore, P., Nurhonen, M., Haaramo, P., Evensen, K. A. I., Vääräsmäki, M., Gissler, M., Hovi, P., & Kajantie, E. (2021). Migraine in children and adults born preterm: A nationwide register linkage study. Cephalalgia, 41(6), 677–689. https://doi.org/10.1177/0333102420978357
Copyright © 2021 by International Headache Society.
https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021082343880
Tiivistelmä
Abstract
Objective:Being born preterm is related to adverse health effects later in life. We studied whether preterm birth predicts the risk of migraine.
Methods:In this nationwide register study, we linked data from six administrative registers for all 235,624 children live-born in Finland (January 1987 to September 1990) and recorded in the Finnish Medical Birth Register. n = 228,610 (97.0%) had adequate data and were included. Migraine served as primary outcome variable and was stringently defined as a diagnosis from specialised health care and/or ≥2 reimbursed purchases of triptans. We applied sex- and birth year-stratified Cox proportional hazard regression models to compute hazard ratios and confidence intervals (95% confidence intervals) for the association between preterm categories and migraine. The cohort was followed up until an average age of 25.1 years (range: 23.3–27.0).
Results:Among individuals born extremely preterm (23–27 completed weeks of gestation), the adjusted hazard ratios for migraine was 0.55 (0.25–1.24) when compared with the full-term reference group (39–41 weeks). The corresponding adjusted hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals for the other preterm categories were: Very preterm (28–31 weeks); 0.95 (0.68–1.31), moderately preterm (32–33 weeks); 0.96 (0.73–1.27), late preterm (34–36 weeks); 1.01 (0.91–1.11), early term (37–38 weeks); 0.98 (0.93–1.03), and post term (42 weeks); 0.98 (0.89–1.08). Migraine was predicted by parental migraine, lower socioeconomic position, maternal hypertensive disorder and maternal smoking during pregnancy.
Conclusions:We found no evidence for a higher risk of migraine among individuals born preterm.
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