Geographic and Ethnic Variation in Migraine Diagnosis and Treatment Among Asian Subgroups in the United States: A National Electronic Health Record Study
Nan Cheng1, Rashmi Halker Singh2, Leon Moskatel3
1UCI, 2Mayo Clinic, 3Stanford University
Objective:

To examine migraine diagnostic and treatment disparities among Asian ethnic subgroups across U.S. counties using national electronic health record (EHR) and census data.

Background:

Asian Americans are underrepresented and aggregated into a single racial category in research, obscuring subgroup-specific disparities. Cultural, socioeconomic, and access factors may impact migraine care in Asian groups, but granular data are lacking. 

Design/Methods:

We conducted a retrospective, county-level analysis using de-identified data from Epic Cosmos and 2020 U.S. Census data, including patients with ICD-10 codes for migraine (G43), chronic migraine (G43.7), or headache (R51.9) from 2020–2024. Counties were analyzed if at least 100 patients had a migraine diagnosis and at least one resident identified with a specific Asian subgroup. We focused on the 18 most populous subgroups, representing 99% of Asian-identifying individuals. Linear regressions were adjusted for age, sex, insurance, and Social Vulnerability Index (SVI), with state-level clustering.

Results:

We identified 17,357,084 patients with headache, 3,348,223 with migraine, and 1,234,133 with chronic migraine across 1,481 counties. Among 18,502,687 individuals within an Asian subgroup, the largest were Asian Indian (23.7%), Chinese (22.2%), and Filipino (16.5%). Counties with higher proportions of Asian residents had lower rates of migraine and chronic migraine diagnoses (0.16 and 0.10 percentage point decreases for every 1% increase in Asian population, both p<0.05). Counties with more White residents showed the opposite trend, with migraine diagnoses increasing by 0.06 percentage points for every 1% increase in White residents (p<0.01). Lower diagnostic specificity rates were observed for Asian Indian, Korean, Pakistani, and Vietnamese subgroups, with ten of eighteen (56%) subgroups demonstrating significantly lower diagnostic specificity rates. CGRP targeted prescriptions were lower in several Asian subgroups, particularly Chinese (−0.33; p<0.05) and Filipino (−0.45; p<0.05).

Conclusions:
Disaggregating data reveals the potential for migraine and chronic migraine underdiagnosis in certain Asian populations. Uncovering hidden disparities is essential to improving migraine care.
10.1212/WNL.0000000000215491
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