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Identifying longitudinal clusters of multimorbidity in an urban setting: A population-based cross-sectional study

Alessandra Bisquera, Martin Gulliford, Hiten Dodhia, Lesedi Ledwaba‐Chapman, Stevo Durbaba, Marina Soley‐Bori, Julia Fox‐Rushby, Mark Ashworth, Yanzhong Wang

2021The Lancet Regional Health - Europe89 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Globally, there is increasing research on clusters of multimorbidity, but few studies have investigated multimorbidity in urban contexts characterised by a young, multi-ethnic, deprived populations. This study identified clusters of associative multimorbidity in an urban setting. METHODS: This is a population-based retrospective cross-sectional study using electronic health records of all adults aged 18 years and over, registered between April 2005 to May 2020 in general practices in one inner London borough. Multiple correspondence analysis and cluster analysis was used to identify groups of multimorbidity from 32 long-term conditions (LTCs). RESULTS: = 174,881), with the median number of conditions being three and increasing with age. Analysis identified five consistent LTC clusters: 1) anxiety and depression (Ratio of within- to between- sum of squares (WSS/BSS <0·01 to <0·01); 2) heart failure, atrial fibrillation, chronic kidney disease (CKD), chronic heart disease (CHD), stroke/transient ischaemic attack (TIA), peripheral arterial disease (PAD), dementia and osteoporosis (WSS/BSS 0·09 to 0·12); 3) osteoarthritis, cancer, chronic pain, hypertension and diabetes (0·05 to 0·06); 4) chronic liver disease and viral hepatitis (WSS/BSS 0·02 to 0·03); 5) substance dependency, alcohol dependency and HIV (WSS/BSS 0·37 to 0·55). INTERPRETATION: Mental health problems, pain, and at-risk behaviours leading to cardiovascular diseases are the important clusters identified in this young, urban population. FUNDING: Impact on Urban Health, United Kingdom.

Topics & Concepts

Cross-sectional studyMultimorbidityGeographyPopulationDemographyMedicineEnvironmental healthSociologyPathologyChronic Disease Management StrategiesDiabetes Management and EducationPrimary Care and Health Outcomes
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