Roomaney Rifqah Abeeda, van Wyk Brian, Cois Annibale, Pillay-van Wyk Victoria
Burden of Disease Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa.
School of Public Health, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa.
Front Public Health. 2022 Apr 4;10:862993. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.862993. eCollection 2022.
Information pertaining to multimorbidity is frequently informed by studies from high income countries and it is unclear how these findings relate to low and middle income countries, where the burden of infectious disease is high. South Africa has a quadruple burden of disease which includes a high HIV prevalence and a growing burden of non-communicable diseases. This study aimed to analyse the prevalence and patterns (disease classes or clusters) of multimorbidity in South Africa.
A secondary analysis of individuals over the age of 15 years who participated in the Fifth South African National HIV Prevalence, Incidence, Behavior and Communication Survey, 2017 (SABSSM 2017) was done. Six disease conditions were identified in the analysis (cancer, diabetes, heart disease, hypertension/high blood pressure, tuberculosis, and HIV). Chi-square tests were used to test for the differences in disease prevalence by sex. Common disease patterns were identified using a latent class analysis.
The sample included 27,896 participants, of which 1,837 had comorbidity or multimorbidity. When taking population-weighting into account, multimorbidity was present in 5.9% (95% CI: 5.4-6.4) of the population The prevalence of multimorbidity tended to be higher among females and increased with age, reaching 21.9% in the oldest age group (70+). The analyses identified seven distinct disease classes in the population. The largest class was "Diabetes and Hypertension" (36.3%), followed by "HIV and Hypertension" (31.0%), and "Heart disease and Hypertension" (14.5%). The four smaller classes were: "HIV, Diabetes, and Heart disease" (6.9%), "TB and HIV" (6.3%), "Hypertension, TB, and Cancer" (2.8%), and "All diseases except HIV" (2.2%).
As the South African population continues to age, the prevalence of multimorbidity is likely to increase which will further impact the health care system. The prevalence of multimorbidity in the population was relatively low but reached up to 20% in the oldest age groups. The largest disease cluster was the combination of diabetes and hypertension; followed by HIV and hypertension. The gains in improving adherence to antiretrovirals amongst treatment-experienced people living with HIV, should be expanded to include compliance with lifestyle/behavioral modifications to blood pressure and glucose control, as well as adherence to anti-hypertension and anti-diabetic medication. There is an urgent need to improve the early diagnosis and treatment of disease in the South African population.
关于多重疾病的信息通常来自高收入国家的研究,目前尚不清楚这些研究结果与传染病负担较重的低收入和中等收入国家有何关联。南非面临四重疾病负担,包括高艾滋病毒感染率以及日益加重的非传染性疾病负担。本研究旨在分析南非多重疾病的患病率及模式(疾病类别或群组)。
对参与2017年第五次南非全国艾滋病毒流行率、发病率、行为及传播调查(SABSSM 2017)的15岁以上个体进行二次分析。分析中确定了六种疾病状况(癌症、糖尿病、心脏病、高血压/高血压、结核病和艾滋病毒)。使用卡方检验来检验按性别划分的疾病患病率差异。通过潜在类别分析确定常见疾病模式。
样本包括27,896名参与者,其中1,837人患有合并症或多重疾病。考虑到人口加权因素后,多重疾病在5.9%(95%置信区间:5.4 - 6.4)的人口中存在。多重疾病的患病率在女性中往往较高,且随年龄增长而增加,在最年长年龄组(70岁以上)达到21.9%。分析确定了人群中的七个不同疾病类别。最大的类别是“糖尿病和高血压”(36.3%),其次是“艾滋病毒和高血压”(31.0%),以及“心脏病和高血压”(14.5%)。四个较小的类别是:“艾滋病毒、糖尿病和心脏病”(6.9%)、“结核病和艾滋病毒”(6.3%)、“高血压、结核病和癌症”(2.8%)以及“除艾滋病毒外的所有疾病”(2.2%)。
随着南非人口持续老龄化,多重疾病的患病率可能会增加,这将进一步影响医疗保健系统。人群中多重疾病的患病率相对较低,但在最年长年龄组中高达20%。最大的疾病群组是糖尿病和高血压的组合;其次是艾滋病毒和高血压。在有治疗经验的艾滋病毒感染者中,改善抗逆转录病毒药物依从性方面所取得的成果,应扩大到包括遵守针对血压和血糖控制的生活方式/行为改变,以及坚持服用抗高血压和抗糖尿病药物。迫切需要改善南非人群疾病的早期诊断和治疗。