Comorbidity in primary care - causal or casual? A longitudinal observational study in family medicine.

IF 2 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Jean K Soler, Nicola Buono, Inge Okkes
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Abstract

Background: Comorbidity is increasingly important in the medical literature, with ever-increasing implications for diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, management and health care. The objective of this study is to measure casual versus causal comorbidity in primary care in three family practice populations.

Methods: This is a longitudinal observational study using the Transition Project datasets. Transition Project family doctors in the Netherlands, Malta and Serbia recorded details of all patient contacts in an episode of care structure using electronic medical records and the International Classification of Primary Care, collecting data on all elements of the doctor-patient encounter, including diagnoses (1,178,178 in the Netherlands, 93,606 in Malta, 405,150 in Serbia), observing 158,370 patient years in the Netherlands, 43,577 in Malta, 72,673 in Serbia. Comorbidity was measured using the odds ratio of both conditions being incident or rest-prevalent in the same patient in one-year dataframes, as against not, corrected for the prior probability of such co-occurrence, between the 41 joint most prevalent (joint top 20) episode titles in the three populations. Specific associations were explored in different age groups to observe the changes in odds ratios with increasing age as a surrogate for a temporal or biological gradient.

Results: The high frequency of observed comorbidity with low consistency in both clinically and statistically significant odds ratios across populations indicates more casual than causal associations. A causal relationship would be expected to be manifest more consistently across populations. Even in the minority of cases where odds ratios were consistent between countries and numerically larger, those associations were observed to weaken with increasing patient age.

Conclusion: After applying accepted criteria for testing the causality of associations, most observed primary care comorbidity is due to chance, likely as a result of increasing illness diversity.

Trial registration: This study was performed on electronic patient record datasets made publicly available by the University of Amsterdam Department of General Practice, and did not involve any patient intervention.

初级保健中的合并症--因果还是偶然?家庭医学纵向观察研究。
背景:合并症在医学文献中越来越重要,对诊断、治疗、预后、管理和保健的影响也越来越大。本研究的目的是测量三个家庭医生群体在初级保健中的偶然合并症与因果合并症:这是一项利用过渡项目数据集进行的纵向观察研究。荷兰、马耳他和塞尔维亚的 "过渡项目 "家庭医生使用电子病历和《国际初级保健分类》记录了在一连串护理结构中所有患者接触的细节,收集了包括诊断在内的所有医患接触要素的数据(荷兰为 1,178,178 人,马耳他为 93,606 人,塞尔维亚为 405,150 人),观察了荷兰的 158,370 个患者年、马耳他的 43,577 个患者年和塞尔维亚的 72,673 个患者年。并发症的测量方法是,在一年的数据帧中,在这三个人群中 41 个共同最流行(共同前 20 位)的发病标题之间,两种疾病在同一患者中同时发生或再次流行的几率比例,与不同时发生的几率比例,并对这种共同发生的先验概率进行校正。对不同年龄组的具体关联进行了探讨,以观察作为时间或生物梯度代用指标的几率比随年龄增长而发生的变化:结果:在不同人群中观察到的合并症频率很高,但临床和统计意义上的几率比的一致性很低,这表明更多的是偶然关系,而不是因果关系。因果关系有望在不同人群中表现得更为一致。即使在少数情况下,不同国家之间的几率比较大且一致,但随着患者年龄的增加,这些关联也会减弱:结论:在采用公认的标准检验关联的因果关系后,观察到的大多数初级保健合并症都是偶然的,很可能是疾病多样性增加的结果:本研究使用的是阿姆斯特丹大学全科医学系公开提供的电子病历数据集,不涉及任何患者干预。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
4.40
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