Islam Nazrul, Shabnam Sharmin, Khan Nusrat, Gillies Clare, Zaccardi Francesco, Banerjee Amitava, Nafilyan Vahé, Khunti Kamlesh, Dambha-Miller Hajira
Primary Care Research Centre, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.
Diabetes Research Centre, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
BMJ Med. 2024 Nov 12;3(1):e001016. doi: 10.1136/bmjmed-2024-001016. eCollection 2024.
To describe which combinations of long term conditions were associated with a higher risk of hospital admission or death during winter 2021-22 (the third wave of the covid-19 pandemic) in adults in England.
Population based cohort study.
Linked primary and secondary care data from the General Practice Extraction Service Data for Pandemic Planning and Research (GDPPR) database, Hospital Episode Statistics, and Office for National Statistics death registry, comprising pseudoanonymised routinely collected electronic medical records from the whole population of England registered at a general practice, 1 December 2021 to 31 March 2022.
48 253 125 individuals, registered in GDPPR in England, aged ≥18 years, and alive on 1 December 2021.
All cause hospital admissions and deaths associated with combinations of multiple long term conditions compared with those with no long term conditions, during the winter season (1 December 2021 to 31 March 2022). Overdispersed Poisson regression models were used to estimate the incidence rate ratios after adjusting for age, sex, ethnic group, and index of multiple deprivation.
Complete data were available for 48 253 125 adults, of whom 15 million (31.2%) had multiple long term conditions. Rates of hospital admissions and deaths among individuals with no long term conditions were 96.3 and 0.8 per 1000 person years, respectively. Compared with those with no long term conditions, the adjusted incidence rate ratio of hospital admissions were 11.0 (95% confidence interval (CI) 9.4 to 12.7) for those with a combination of cancer, chronic kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, and type 2 diabetes mellitus; 9.8 (8.3 to 11.4) for those with cancer, chronic kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, and osteoarthritis; and 9.6 (8.6 to 10.7) for those with cancer, chronic kidney disease, and cardiovascular disease. Compared with those with no long term conditions, the adjusted rate ratio of death was 21.4 (17.5 to 26.0) for those with chronic kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, and dementia; 23.2 (17.5 to 30.3) for those with cancer, chronic kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, and dementia; and 24.3 (19.1 to 30.4) for those with chronic kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, dementia, and osteoarthritis. Cardiovascular disease with dementia appeared in all of the top five combinations of multiple long term conditions for mortality, and this two disease combination was associated with a substantially higher rate of death than many three, four, and five disease combinations.
In this study, rates of hospital admission and death varied by combinations of multiple long term conditions and were substantially higher in those with than in those without any long term conditions. High risk combinations for prioritisation and preventive action by policy makers were highlighted to help manage the challenges imposed by winter pressures on the NHS.
描述在2021 - 2022年冬季(新冠疫情第三波期间),英国成年人中哪些长期病症组合与更高的住院或死亡风险相关。
基于人群的队列研究。
来自全科医疗提取服务大流行规划与研究数据(GDPPR)数据库、医院事件统计数据以及国家统计局死亡登记处的初级和二级医疗保健数据相链接,包括2021年12月1日至2022年3月31日在英国全科医疗登记的全体人口的伪匿名常规收集电子病历。
48253125名在英国GDPPR登记的个体,年龄≥18岁,且在2021年12月1日时存活。
在冬季(2021年12月1日至2022年3月31日),与无长期病症者相比,多种长期病症组合相关的全因住院和死亡情况。使用过度分散泊松回归模型在调整年龄、性别、种族和多重贫困指数后估计发病率比。
48253125名成年人有完整数据,其中1500万(31.2%)患有多种长期病症。无长期病症个体的住院率和死亡率分别为每1000人年96.3例和0.8例。与无长期病症者相比,患癌症、慢性肾病、心血管疾病和2型糖尿病组合者的住院调整发病率比为11.0(95%置信区间(CI)9.4至12.7);患癌症、慢性肾病、心血管疾病和骨关节炎者为9.8(8.3至11.4);患癌症、慢性肾病和心血管疾病者为9.6(8.6至10.7)。与无长期病症者相比,患慢性肾病、心血管疾病和痴呆症者的死亡调整率比为21.4(17.5至26.0);患癌症、慢性肾病、心血管疾病和痴呆症者为23.2(17.5至30.3);患慢性肾病、心血管疾病、痴呆症和骨关节炎者为24.3(19.1至30.4)。心血管疾病合并痴呆症出现在所有死亡率最高的五种多种长期病症组合中,且这种两种疾病的组合与许多三种、四种和五种疾病组合相比,死亡率显著更高。
在本研究中,住院率和死亡率因多种长期病症组合而异,有长期病症者的比率显著高于无任何长期病症者。强调了高风险组合,以便政策制定者确定优先事项并采取预防行动,以帮助应对冬季压力给国民医疗服务体系带来的挑战。