Healthcare Expenditures Associated with Comorbid Anxiety and Depression among Adults with Migraine
Abstract Objective. To examine direct healthcare expenditures among adults with migraine alone or with comorbid anxiety and/or depression. Methods. This was a retrospective cross-sectional study using the 2012, 2014, and 2016 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data. Adult patients aged ≥22 years with migraine headache were included in the study. The direct healthcare expenditures of four migraine groups (migraine alone, migraine and anxiety, migraine and depression, migraine and both conditions) were compared. Results. There were 1,556 patients met the inclusion criteria and were eventually enrolled in the study. Approximately, 50% of the study sample had migraine with comorbid depression and/or anxiety (16.1% have depression, 12.3% have anxiety disorder, and 13.9% have both). The mean total healthcare expenditures of adults with migraine alone ($6,461) were significantly lower than those with comorbid depression and anxiety ($11,102), comorbid anxiety ($10,817), and comorbid depression ($14,577). Migraine with comorbid anxiety and depression was significantly associated with incremental costs of $1,027 in outpatient’s and $662 emergency room healthcare expenditures, compared to the migraine alone group after controlling for a multitude of covariates. Besides, migraine with comorbid anxiety and/or depression was significantly associated with incremental costs of prescription drug, compared to the migraine alone group. Conclusions. The healthcare expenditures associated with migraine with comorbid depression and/or anxiety are significantly higher than those without mental health comorbidities. Therefore, regular depression and anxiety screening for patients with migraine may help in reducing the healthcare expenditures associated with depression and/or anxiety comorbidities as well as in improving the quality of care.