Quiñones Ana R, Markwardt Sheila, Botoseneanu Anda
School of Public Health, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland. Portland VA Medical Center, Oregon.
School of Public Health, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2016 Jun;71(6):823-30. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glw035. Epub 2016 Mar 11.
Multimorbidity (multiple co-occurring chronic diseases) is associated with greater likelihood of disability and mortality, above and beyond the risk attributable to individual diseases. This study identifies prevalent multimorbidity patterns and evaluates their association with disability among U.S. older adults.
Prospective cohort study using longitudinal Health and Retirement Study data (2010-2012). We included 8,782 participants aged 65 years and older and used negative binomial models to examine prospective disability, measured by the combined activities of daily living-instrumental activities of daily living index. Multimorbidity was defined as the co-occurring combination of at least two of the following chronic diseases: hypertension, cardiovascular disease, lung disease, diabetes, cancer, arthritis, stroke, cognitive impairment, or high depressive symptoms (CES-D score ≥ 4).
We found 291 unique disease combinations with 1 to 1,167 older adults per disease combination. The three most prevalent combinations were: (a) hypertension and arthritis (n = 1,167); (b) hypertension, arthritis, and cardiovascular disease (n = 510); and (c) hypertension, arthritis, and diabetes (n = 430). Only one of the prevalent combinations included depressive symptoms (in combination with arthritis, hypertension; n = 129). This group showed the highest level of activities of daily living-instrumental activities of daily living disability compared to healthy participants or participants with a single disease (either included in the combination or different from diseases in the combination) even after adjusting for age, gender, education, race/ethnicity, and body mass index.
Clinicians stand to gain from a better understanding of which disease combinations are more and less disabling among older adults. Understanding how multimorbidity combinations relate to functional status is an important step towards reducing disability and sustaining independent living among older adults.
多病共存(多种慢性病同时存在)与残疾和死亡的可能性增加相关,这种风险超出了单一疾病所致的风险。本研究确定了美国老年人中普遍存在的多病共存模式,并评估了它们与残疾的关联。
使用纵向健康与退休研究数据(2010 - 2012年)进行前瞻性队列研究。我们纳入了8782名65岁及以上的参与者,并使用负二项模型来检查前瞻性残疾情况,通过日常生活活动 - 工具性日常生活活动指数进行衡量。多病共存被定义为以下至少两种慢性病同时出现的组合:高血压、心血管疾病、肺部疾病、糖尿病、癌症、关节炎、中风、认知障碍或高抑郁症状(CES - D评分≥4)。
我们发现了291种独特的疾病组合,每种疾病组合有1至1167名老年人。三种最常见的组合是:(a)高血压和关节炎(n = 1167);(b)高血压、关节炎和心血管疾病(n = 510);以及(c)高血压、关节炎和糖尿病(n = 430)。只有一种常见组合包括抑郁症状(与关节炎、高血压同时出现;n = 129)。即使在调整了年龄、性别、教育程度、种族/民族和体重指数之后,与健康参与者或患有单一疾病(无论是组合中包含的疾病还是与组合中的疾病不同)的参与者相比,这组人群在日常生活活动 - 工具性日常生活活动残疾方面表现出最高水平。
临床医生若能更好地了解哪些疾病组合在老年人中致残性较高或较低,将有所收获。了解多病共存组合与功能状态之间的关系是减少老年人残疾并维持其独立生活的重要一步。