发病时间对多病患者死亡率的影响:丹麦全国登记研究。

Journal of multimorbidity and comorbidity Pub Date : 2022-08-21 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1177/26335565221122025
Tora G Willadsen, Volkert Siersma, Dagny R Nicolaisdóttir, Rasmus Køster-Rasmussen, Susanne Reventlow, Maarten Rozing
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:多发病与死亡率增加有关。已知某些疾病的组合比其他疾病更致命,但关于疾病发生的时间顺序如何影响死亡率的有限知识可能会妨碍对多病患者进行有效临床干预的发展。目的:探讨多病患者发病时间是否与死亡率相关。设计:进行了一项前瞻性全国队列研究,包括2000年1月1日年龄≥18岁的3,986,209人。我们包括十个诊断组:肺、肌肉骨骼、内分泌、精神、癌症、神经、胃肠、心血管、肾脏和感觉器官。我们将多重发病定义为来自两个诊断组的至少两种诊断(十分之一)。为了确定死亡率,采用逻辑回归模型计算优势比(OR)和风险比(RORs)。结果:对于大多数多病合并,发病时间不改变死亡率。然而,当多病包括精神健康诊断时,如果首先出现精神健康诊断,死亡率通常更高。如果多病包括心脏和感觉的诊断,如果这些是其次发生的,死亡率会更高。对于大多数多病组合,如果多病同时诊断,而不是连续诊断,例如,心脏和肾脏(3.58 ROR;CI 2.39-5.36),或心理健康和肌肉骨骼诊断(ROR 2.38;可信区间1.70 - -3.32)。结论:总的来说,在多病中,除了少数例外,疾病发生的时间顺序与死亡率无关。对于几乎所有的多病组合,如果同时诊断,诊断与死亡率有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The effect of disease onset chronology on mortality among patients with multimorbidity: A Danish nationwide register study.

The effect of disease onset chronology on mortality among patients with multimorbidity: A Danish nationwide register study.

The effect of disease onset chronology on mortality among patients with multimorbidity: A Danish nationwide register study.

The effect of disease onset chronology on mortality among patients with multimorbidity: A Danish nationwide register study.

Background: Multimorbidity is associated with increased mortality. Certain combinations of diseases are known to be more lethal than others, but the limited knowledge of how the chronology in which diseases develop impacts mortality may impair the development of effective clinical interventions for patients with multimorbidity.

Objective: To explore if in multimorbidity the chronology of disease onset is associated with mortality. Design: A prospective nationwide cohort study, including 3,986,209 people aged ≥18 years on 1 January 2000, was performed. We included ten diagnosis groups: lung, musculoskeletal, endocrine, mental, cancer, neurological, gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, kidney, and sensory organs. We defined multimorbidity as the presence of at least two diagnoses from two diagnosis groups (out of ten). To determine mortality, logistic regression models were used to calculate odds ratios (OR) and ratio of ORs (RORs).

Results: For most combinations of multimorbidity, the chronology of disease onset does not change mortality. However, when multimorbidity included mental health diagnoses, mortality was in general higher if the mental health diagnosis appeared first. If multimorbidity included heart and sensory diagnoses, mortality was higher if these developed second. For the majority of multimorbidity combinations, there was excess mortality if multimorbidity was diagnosed simultaneously, rather than consecutively, for example, heart and kidney (3.58 ROR; CI 2.39-5.36), or mental health and musculoskeletal diagnoses (2.38 ROR; CI 1.70-3.32).

Conclusions: Overall, in multimorbidity, the chronology in which diseases develop is not associated with mortality, with few exceptions. For almost all combinations of multimorbidity, diagnoses act synergistically in relation to mortality if diagnosed simultaneously.

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