Multimorbidity patterns in older persons and their association with self-reported quality of life and limitations in activities of daily living

Jennifer E. Lutomski*, Trynke Hoekstra, Marjan van den Akker, Jeanet Blom, Amaia Calderón-Larrañaga, Alessandra Marengoni, Alexandra Prados-Torres, Marcel Olde-Rikkert, Rene Melis, TOPICS-MDS Consortium

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: As populations age, multimorbidity (the presence of two or more chronic morbidities) is increasingly more common. These evolving demographics demand further research into the identification of morbidity patterns in different settings as well as the longitudinal effects of these patterns. Methods: Prospectively collected data on 12,755 older persons aged 65+ years were derived from The Older Persons and Informal Caregivers Survey Minimum DataSet (TOPICS-MDS, www.topics-mds.eu). Latent class analyses were performed to identify unobserved relationship patterns between morbidities in older persons. Using linear mixed models, the average difference in health-related quality of life (EQ-5D) and general quality of life scores (Cantril's Self Anchoring Ladder) as well as limitations in Activities of Daily Living and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (ADL/IADL) were examined over a 12-month period. Results: Five multimorbidity patterns were identified: sensory (n = 3882), cardio-metabolic (n = 2627), mental health (n = 920), osteo-articular (n = 4486), and system decline (n = 840). Relative to older persons in the sensory group, multimorbidity patterns did not have a strong effect on health-related quality of life, general quality of life or ADL/IADLs over a one-year period. Conclusions: The observed multimorbidity patterns are similar to others based on different methodologies and study populations. When examining the effect of such patterns on quality of life, the EQ-5D and Cantril's Ladder may be insufficient outcome measures. Further investigations into the prognostic value of morbidity patterns would be of benefit.
Original languageEnglish
Article number105134
Number of pages7
JournalArchives of Gerontology and Geriatrics
Volume115
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2023

Keywords

  • ADLs
  • EQ-5D
  • Latent class analysis
  • Multimorbidity
  • Quality of life

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