Ho Iris S S, Azcoaga-Lorenzo Amaya, Akbari Ashley, Davies Jim, Khunti Kamlesh, Kadam Umesh T, Lyons Ronan A, McCowan Colin, Mercer Stewart W, Nirantharakumar Krishnarajah, Staniszewska Sophie, Guthrie Bruce
Usher Institute, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh Medical School, Edinburgh, UK.
Bute Medical School, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, UK.
BMJ Med. 2022 Jul 27;1(1):e000247. doi: 10.1136/bmjmed-2022-000247. eCollection 2022.
To develop international consensus on the definition and measurement of multimorbidity in research.
Delphi consensus study.
International consensus; data collected in three online rounds from participants between 30 November 2020 and 18 May 2021.
Professionals interested in multimorbidity and people with long term conditions were recruited to professional and public panels.
150 professional and 25 public participants completed the first survey round. Response rates for rounds 2/3 were 83%/92% for professionals and 88%/93% in the public panel, respectively. Across both panels, the consensus was that multimorbidity should be defined as two or more long term conditions. Complex multimorbidity was perceived to be a useful concept, but the panels were unable to agree on how to define it. Both panels agreed that conditions should be included in a multimorbidity measure if they were one or more of the following: currently active; permanent in their effects; requiring current treatment, care, or therapy; requiring surveillance; or relapsing-remitting conditions requiring ongoing care. Consensus was reached for 24 conditions to always include in multimorbidity measures, and 35 conditions to usually include unless a good reason not to existed. Simple counts were preferred for estimating prevalence and examining clustering or trajectories, and weighted measures were preferred for risk adjustment and outcome prediction.
Previous multimorbidity research is limited by inconsistent definitions and approaches to measuring multimorbidity. This Delphi study identifies professional and public panel consensus guidance to facilitate consistency of definition and measurement, and to improve study comparability and reproducibility.
就研究中多重疾病的定义和测量达成国际共识。
德尔菲共识研究。
国际共识;于2020年11月30日至2021年5月18日期间通过三轮在线调查收集参与者数据。
招募对多重疾病感兴趣的专业人员和患有长期疾病的人员加入专业小组和公众小组。
150名专业人员和25名公众参与者完成了第一轮调查。专业人员第二轮/第三轮的回复率分别为83%/92%,公众小组为88%/93%。在两个小组中,共识是多重疾病应定义为两种或更多种长期疾病。复杂多重疾病被认为是一个有用的概念,但两个小组未能就如何定义达成一致。两个小组都同意,如果疾病符合以下一项或多项条件,则应纳入多重疾病测量:目前处于活动期;影响是永久性的;需要当前的治疗、护理或疗法;需要监测;或复发-缓解性疾病需要持续护理。就多重疾病测量中应始终纳入的24种疾病以及通常应纳入的35种疾病达成了共识,除非有充分理由不纳入。估计患病率、检查聚集情况或疾病轨迹时,首选简单计数法;进行风险调整和结果预测时,首选加权测量法。
以往的多重疾病研究受到多重疾病定义和测量方法不一致的限制。这项德尔菲研究确定了专业小组和公众小组的共识指南,以促进定义和测量的一致性,并提高研究的可比性和可重复性。