Department of Family Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, Chicago, IL, United States.
Department of Family Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, Chicago, IL, United States.
Arch Gerontol Geriatr. 2021 Mar-Apr;93:104292. doi: 10.1016/j.archger.2020.104292. Epub 2020 Nov 6.
The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between specific combinations of chronic conditions and disability in Mexican older adults with diabetes.
This was a prospective cohort study of Mexican adults (n = 2558) with diabetes and aged 51 or older that used data from the 2012 and 2015 waves of the Mexican Health and Aging Study. The main outcome was an index that measured ability to perform activities of daily living and instrumental activities of daily living. The main independent variables were diabetes multimorbidity combinations, defined as diabetes and at least one other chronic condition. The authors calculated the prevalence of each multimorbidity combination present in the sample in 2012 and used negative binomial regression models to estimate the association of the most prevalent of these combinations with disability incidence in 2015.
The three most prevalent combinations were: 1) diabetes-hypertension (n = 637, 31.9%) 2) diabetes-hypertension-depression (n = 388, 19.4%) and 3) diabetes-depression (n = 211, 10.6%). In fully adjusted models comparing participants with specific multimorbidity combinations to participants with diabetes alone, the combinations that had an increased association with disability were diabetes-hypertension-depression, diabetes-depression and diabetes-hypertension-arthritis-depression. In nested models, the addition of arthritis to combinations including depression increased this association.
Consistent with prior studies, multimorbidity combinations including depression were associated with increased risk of disability. However, the effect size of this relationship was lower than what had been previously been reported internationally. This highlights the need for globally oriented multimorbidity research.
本研究旨在探讨墨西哥老年糖尿病患者中特定慢性疾病组合与残疾之间的关系。
这是一项对墨西哥成年人(n=2558)的前瞻性队列研究,他们患有糖尿病,年龄在 51 岁或以上,使用了 2012 年和 2015 年墨西哥健康与老龄化研究的数据。主要结果是衡量日常生活活动和工具性日常生活活动能力的指数。主要的独立变量是糖尿病合并症组合,定义为糖尿病和至少一种其他慢性疾病。作者计算了 2012 年样本中每种合并症组合的患病率,并使用负二项回归模型估计这些组合中最常见的组合与 2015 年残疾发生率的关联。
最常见的三种组合是:1)糖尿病-高血压(n=637,31.9%),2)糖尿病-高血压-抑郁(n=388,19.4%)和 3)糖尿病-抑郁(n=211,10.6%)。在将具有特定合并症组合的参与者与仅患有糖尿病的参与者进行完全调整的模型比较中,与残疾相关增加的组合是糖尿病-高血压-抑郁、糖尿病-抑郁和糖尿病-高血压-关节炎-抑郁。在嵌套模型中,将关节炎添加到包括抑郁的组合中增加了这种关联。
与先前的研究一致,包括抑郁在内的合并症组合与残疾风险增加相关。然而,这种关系的效应大小低于国际上先前报告的水平。这突出表明需要进行面向全球的合并症研究。