Migraine headaches are highly prevalent and, for women below the age of 50, the leading cause of years lived with disability. Migraines disproportionately affect persons of lower socioeconomic status and those who are uninsured, and they result in millions of office and emergency department visits annually. Migraines are also responsible for billions of dollars in lost productivity and health care expenses each year. Medication classes traditionally used for migraine headache treatment have included nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, acetaminophen, antihypertensive drugs, antiseizure drugs, antidepressant drugs, and botulinum toxin. In recent years, triptans have come into widespread use for acute treatment, and calcitonin gene-related peptide antagonists, including gepants and monoclonal antibodies, have been used for both acute treatment and prevention. In 2025, the International Headache Society and the American College of Physicians published guidelines on pharmacotherapy for migraine headaches covering both acute and preventive treatments. Here, 2 experts in this field, a primary care physician and a neurologist and headache specialist, debate how to manage the case of a patient with frequent migraine headaches. They discuss the diagnostic considerations and the acute and preventive treatment challenges in the care of this population.
CME/MOC:
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Video Recordings
Product:
Annals Beyond the Guidelines
From Annals of Internal Medicine (annals.org), Beyond the Guidelines is an educational feature based on recent guidelines. Each considers a patient (or patients) who "falls between the cracks" of available evidence and for whom the optimal clinical course in unclear. Presented at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) Grand Rounds, each conference reviews the background evidence and experts then discuss the patient(s) and field audience questions. Videos of the interviews and conference, the slide presentation, and a CME/MOC activity accompany each module.