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Association of Multimorbidity and Excess Mortality After Fractures Among Danish Adults

Authors :
Tran, Thach
Bliuc, Dana
Ho-Le, Thao
Abrahamsen, Bo
van den Bergh, Joop P
Chen, Weiwen
Eisman, John A
Geusens, Piet
Hansen, Louise
Vestergaard, Peter
Nguyen, Tuan V
Blank, Robert D
Center, Jacqueline R
Tran, Thach
Bliuc, Dana
Ho-Le, Thao
Abrahamsen, Bo
van den Bergh, Joop P
Chen, Weiwen
Eisman, John A
Geusens, Piet
Hansen, Louise
Vestergaard, Peter
Nguyen, Tuan V
Blank, Robert D
Center, Jacqueline R
Source :
Jama network open vol.5 (2022) date: 2022-10-03 nr.10 [ISSN 2574-3805]
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Importance: Limited knowledge about interactions among health disorders impedes optimal patient care. Because comorbidities are common among patients 50 years and older with fractures, these fractures provide a useful setting for studying interactions among disorders.Objective: To define multimorbidity clusters at the time of fracture and quantify the interaction between multimorbidity and fracture in association with postfracture excess mortality.Design, Setting, and Participants: This nationwide cohort study included 307 870 adults in Denmark born on or before January 1, 1951, who had an incident low-trauma fracture between January 1, 2001, and December 31, 2014, and were followed up through December 31, 2016. Data were analyzed from February 1 to March 31, 2022.Main Outcomes and Measures: Fracture and 32 predefined chronic diseases recorded within 5 years before the index fracture were identified from the Danish National Hospital Discharge Register. Death was ascertained from the Danish Register on Causes of Death. Latent class analysis was conducted to identify multimorbidity clusters. Relative survival analysis was used to quantify excess mortality associated with the combination of multimorbidity and fractures at specific sites.Results: Among the 307 870 participants identified with incident fractures, 95 372 were men (31.0%; mean [SD] age at fracture, 72.3 [11.2] years) and 212 498 were women (69.0%; mean [SD] age at fracture, 74.9 [11.2] years). During a median of 6.5 (IQR, 3.0-11.0) years of follow-up, 41 017 men (43.0%) and 81 727 women (38.5%) died. Almost half of patients with fractures (42.9%) had at least 2 comorbidities. Comorbidities at fracture were categorized as low-multimorbidity (60.5% in men and 66.5% in women), cardiovascular (23.7% in men and 23.5% in women), diabetic (5.6% in men and 5.0% in women), malignant (5.1% in men and 5.0% in women), and mixed hepatic and/or inflammatory (5.1% in men only) clusters. The

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Jama network open vol.5 (2022) date: 2022-10-03 nr.10 [ISSN 2574-3805]
Notes :
DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.35856, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1376707122
Document Type :
Electronic Resource