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Original Research

Economic analysis of acupuncture for migraine prophylaxis

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Pages 3053-3061 | Published online: 12 Nov 2018
 

Abstract

Background

Acupuncture has become a viable option for migraine prophylaxis in Europe; however, despite its wide use, more data on the short- and long-term cost-effectiveness are needed when considering the perspectives of a paying third-party, the patient, and of society in general. The aim was to evaluate the cost and effectiveness of adjuvant acupuncture to pharmacologic treatment vs pharmacologic treatment alone in migraine patients after a 3-month acupuncture course and a 6-month follow-up from all perspectives.

Methods

The study involved an open-label randomized clinical trial of patients receiving acupuncture (n=42), and a waiting list control group (n=44). The number of migraine days during the last 28 days, as well as direct and indirect costs were considered. The trial was registered under DRKS00009803.

Results

The total cost per patient reached €696 vs €285 after 3 months of acupuncture and €66 vs €132 in the acupuncture and control groups after a 6-month follow-up, respectively (P=0.071). The trends observed in effectiveness and costs from all perspectives are discussed.

Conclusion

The inclusion of acupuncture in health care results beneficial mainly for its observed trend in reduced losses of productivity and income, with the latter often exceeding the costs of acupuncture treatment. As such, acupuncture may be recommended as an adjuvant treatment in migraine prophylaxis to standard pharmacotherapy.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Professor Bohuslav Manek and Doctor Daniel Diaz for translation and proofreading our manuscript and Marketa Talackova for collection of medication pharmacy retail prices. This work was supported by the project (Ministry of Health, Czech Republic) for conceptual development of research organization 00179906 (MH CZ – DRO; grant number UHHK, 00179906).

Disclosure

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.