Vogelgsang Jonathan, Wolff-Menzler Claus, Kis Bernhard, Abdel-Hamid Mona, Wiltfang Jens, Hessmann Philipp
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center, Goettingen, Germany.
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Goettingen, Germany.
Psychogeriatrics. 2018 Sep;18(5):393-401. doi: 10.1111/psyg.12338. Epub 2018 Jul 11.
Multimorbidity in dementia is associated with an increased risk of complications and a higher need for care. Having knowledge of cardiovascular and metabolic comorbidities is crucial when making decisions about diagnostic procedures and therapies. We compared the prevalence of comorbidities in hospitalized patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), vascular dementia, and psychiatric diseases other than dementia. Additionally, we compared clinically relevant health-care indicators (length of hospital stay, rate of re-hospitalization) between these groups.
We used information from a database of treatment-relevant indicators from psychiatric and psychosomatic hospitals throughout Germany. This database contains routinely recorded data collected from 85 German hospitals from 2011 to 2015. In total, 14 411 AD cases, 7156 vascular dementia cases, and 34 534 cases involving non-demented psychiatric patients (used as controls) were included. To analyze comorbidities and health-care indicators, χ tests and t-tests were used.
Diabetes mellitus, lipoprotein disorders, coronary artery diseases, cardiac arrhythmia and insufficiency, and atherosclerosis were significantly more prevalent in patients with vascular dementia than in those with AD and psychiatric controls. Hypertension and coronary artery diseases were less frequently associated with AD than with non-demented psychiatric controls (P < 0.001). Additionally, dementia patients with cardiovascular or metabolic diseases exhibited longer hospital stays (+ 1.4 days, P < 0.001) and were more often re-hospitalized within 3 weeks (P < 0.001) and 1 year (P < 0.001) compared to dementia patients without these comorbidities.
Awareness of somatic comorbidities in patients with dementia is crucial to avoid complications during inpatient treatment. The occurrence of comorbid disorders was associated with longer and more frequent hospital stays, which potentially lead to higher health-care costs. Further studies should evaluate the causative association between somatic comorbidities and inpatient costs in dementia patients.
痴呆症中的多种疾病与并发症风险增加及更高的护理需求相关。在制定诊断程序和治疗决策时,了解心血管和代谢合并症至关重要。我们比较了阿尔茨海默病(AD)、血管性痴呆和非痴呆性精神疾病住院患者中合并症的患病率。此外,我们还比较了这些组之间临床相关的医疗保健指标(住院时间、再次住院率)。
我们使用了来自德国各地精神科和身心科医院治疗相关指标数据库的信息。该数据库包含2011年至2015年从85家德国医院常规记录的数据。总共纳入了14411例AD病例、7156例血管性痴呆病例和34534例非痴呆性精神疾病患者(用作对照)。为分析合并症和医疗保健指标,使用了χ检验和t检验。
血管性痴呆患者中糖尿病、脂蛋白紊乱、冠状动脉疾病、心律失常和心脏功能不全以及动脉粥样硬化的患病率明显高于AD患者和精神疾病对照者。高血压和冠状动脉疾病与AD的关联低于与非痴呆性精神疾病对照者(P<0.001)。此外,与无这些合并症的痴呆患者相比,患有心血管或代谢疾病的痴呆患者住院时间更长(+1.4天,P<0.001),并且在3周内(P<0.001)和1年内(P<0.001)更常再次住院。
了解痴呆患者的躯体合并症对于避免住院治疗期间的并发症至关重要。合并症的发生与更长、更频繁的住院时间相关,这可能导致更高的医疗保健成本。进一步的研究应评估痴呆患者躯体合并症与住院费用之间的因果关系。