Molina Emily, del Rincon Inmaculada, Restrepo Jose Felix, Battafarano Daniel F, Escalante Agustin
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Drive, San Antonio, TX, 78229, USA.
San Antonio Military Medical Center, San Antonio, TX, USA.
BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2015 Oct 5;16:277. doi: 10.1186/s12891-015-0727-7.
Death certificates can be used to assess disease prevalence and incidence; however, rheumatoid arthritis (RA) often remains unreported in death certificates. We sought to determine to what extent RA is underreported and what demographic and clinical characteristics could predict mention of RA in the death certificate.
We recruited 1328 patients with RA from private, public and military rheumatology practices and followed them prospectively for yearly evaluations. A rheumatologist assessed clinical characteristics of RA and comorbidities at each evaluation. Deaths were identified through family members, other physicians, obituaries and public death databases. All were confirmed with state-issued death certificates. Patients with and without RA in death certificate were compared using bivariate and multivariate analyses.
By December 2013, 326 deaths had occurred. We received and reviewed death certificates for all confirmed deaths, of which 58 (17.7 %) mentioned RA on the death certificate. Bivariate analysis revealed that younger age, a greater number of deformities, higher Sharp score and lower socioeconomic status were each associated with recording RA. Multivariable analyses revealed that comorbidity [OR (95 % CI) = 0.84 (0.73, 0.97); P = 0.022] was inversely associated with listing RA on the death certificate, while the number of deformities [OR (95 % CI) = 1.04 (1.00, 1.07); P = 0.033] and a certified physician's signature on the death certificate [OR (95 % CI) = 4.79 (1.35, 16.9); P = 0.015] increased likelihood of reporting RA.
In this cohort, RA was not listed in over 80 % of death certificates. Younger patients with fewer comorbidities and more joint deformities were more likely to have RA reported.
RA is often not included in death certificates. The findings of this study suggest that older patients may have a greater number of comorbidities, thus decreasing the likelihood that RA be included when completing the death certificate.
死亡证明可用于评估疾病的患病率和发病率;然而,类风湿关节炎(RA)在死亡证明中常常未被报告。我们试图确定RA未报告的程度以及哪些人口统计学和临床特征可预测死亡证明中提及RA。
我们从私立、公立和军队的风湿病诊所招募了1328例RA患者,并对他们进行前瞻性年度评估。每次评估时,风湿病专家评估RA的临床特征和合并症。通过家庭成员、其他医生、讣告和公共死亡数据库确定死亡情况。所有死亡均经国家出具的死亡证明确认。对死亡证明中有无RA的患者进行双变量和多变量分析。
到2013年12月,已发生326例死亡。我们收到并审查了所有确诊死亡的死亡证明,其中58例(17.7%)在死亡证明中提及RA。双变量分析显示,年龄较小、畸形数量较多、Sharp评分较高和社会经济地位较低均与记录RA相关。多变量分析显示,合并症[比值比(95%置信区间)=0.84(0.73,0.97);P=0.022]与在死亡证明中列出RA呈负相关,而畸形数量[比值比(95%置信区间)=1.04(1.00,1.07);P=0.033]和死亡证明上有认证医生的签名[比值比(95%置信区间)=4.79(1.35,16.9);P=0.015]增加了报告RA的可能性。
在该队列中,超过80%的死亡证明未列出RA。合并症较少且关节畸形较多的年轻患者更有可能报告有RA。
RA通常未被列入死亡证明。本研究结果表明,老年患者可能有更多的合并症,因此在填写死亡证明时RA被列入的可能性降低。