| Literature DB >> 36187908 |
Rosie Dunn1, Eleanor Clayton1, Emma Wolverson1, Andrea Hilton1.
Abstract
Background: Older people and people with dementia experience a high prevalence of multiple health conditions. The terms 'comorbidity' and 'multimorbidity' are often used interchangeably to describe this, however there are key conceptual differences between these terms and their definitions. This has led to issues in the validity and comparability of research findings, potentially inappropriate intervention development and differences in quality of health care. Objective: To review how the terms 'comorbidity' and 'multimorbidity' are defined within peer-reviewed dementia research and propose an operational framework. Design: A scoping review of definitions within dementia research was carried out. Searches took place across five databases: Academic Search Premier, CINAHL Complete, MEDLINE, PsycARTICLES and PsycINFO. PRISMA-ScR guidelines were followed.Entities:
Keywords: Multimorbidity; comorbidity; dementia; scoping review; syndemic
Year: 2022 PMID: 36187908 PMCID: PMC9520180 DOI: 10.1177/26335565221128432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Multimorb Comorb ISSN: 2633-5565
Terms and definitions of multiple health conditions.
| Term | Definition
|
|---|---|
| Comorbidity | ‘any distinct additional clinical entity that has existed or that may occur during the clinical course of a patient who has the index disease under study’
|
| Multimorbidity | ‘the co-existence of two or more chronic conditions, where one is not necessarily more central than the others’.
|
| Long-term conditions | ‘A long-term condition (LTC) is a condition that cannot, at present, be cured but is controlled by medication and/or other treatment or therapies’
|
| Multiple chronic conditions | ‘Two or more chronic conditions that are expected to last at least 12 months and that confer a significant risk of death, decompensation, or functional decline’
|
| Patient complexity | Schaink et al.
|
| Polymorbidity | ‘Although there is no universally accepted definition of poly-morbidity (also known as multimorbidity), some authors define it as being the co-occurrence of at least two chronic health conditions in the same person’.
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| Multi | No definition found. See research articles authored by Mamhidir et al.
|
aNB various terms and definitions exist to describe multiple health conditions; the above are given here for illustration.
Figure 1.PRISMA Flow Diagram.
Comorbidity definitions.
| Paper reference | Definition | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Aldridge and Harrison Dening
| ‘Comorbidity is the term used when a person has two or more chronic, long-term conditions such as schizophrenia and diabetes’ | NICE
|
| Aldridge and Harrison Dening
| ‘Comorbidity, on the other hand, refers to situations where one or more conditions coexist with one being a primary or index condition. For example, an oncologist may consider the impact of comorbid conditions in the treatment and management of cancer’. | Valderas et al.
|
| Aubert et al.
| ‘… yet older adults can develop an accumulation of comorbidities, which are defined as pathologies that influence the onset or evolution of an index pathology…’ | Extermann
|
| Beghi and Beghi
| ‘A comorbid condition is one that occurs in association with a given disease’. |
|
| Browne et al.
| ‘We defined comorbidity as the presence of one or more chronic health conditions, excluding dementia itself as the index condition, based on the list of long-term conditions in UK primary care published by Barnett et al…’ | Barnett et al.
|
| Bunn et al.
| ‘Comorbidity - the presence of more than one distinct condition in one individual. Definitions tend to consider that one condition assumes a central place’. | Feinstein
|
| Bunn et al.
| ‘… There are different conceptualisations of comorbidity but they are based on the core concept of more than one distinct condition in an individual…’ | Valderas et al.
|
| Clodomiro et al.
| ‘People affected by dementia often present with additional chronic medical conditions (comorbidity)’. |
|
| Damiani et al.
| ‘…we defined comorbid disease as the simultaneous occurrence of at least one medical condition in the same person in addition to dementia…’ | Van den Akker et al.
|
| Dasch et al.
| ‘… comorbidity — i.e., they suffer from several diseases simultaneously…’ |
|
| Formiga et al.
| ‘comorbidity (i.e. the presence of one or more disorders in addition to dementia)’ |
|
| Gerritsen et al.
| ‘Comorbidity, which is any clinical condition that occurs during the course of an index disease…’ |
|
| Griffith et al.
| ‘The terms “comorbidity” and “multimorbidity” both refer to the occurrence of multiple chronic conditions within the same individual; however “comorbidity” refers to the effects of additional conditions in reference to an index chronic condition (such as diabetes, dementia, and stroke)’. | Van den Akker et al.
|
| Haaksma et al.
| ‘Comorbidity is defined as any additional co-existing ailment in a patient with a particular index disease’. | Feinstein
|
| Haaksma et al.
| ‘…dementia patients are likely to suffer from concurrent diseases, ie, comorbidity’ |
|
| Heun et al.
| ‘A co-morbid disease was defined as any diagnosis of a somatic or mental disorder other than AD’ |
|
| Kaczynski et al.
| ‘comorbidity (one or more other diseases in addition to the underlying disease)’ | Valderas et al.
|
| Kim et al.
| ‘Although the definition of comorbidity is simple—the “means two or more medical conditions or disease processes that are additional to an initial diagnosis and directly or in-directly affects health outcomes (Feinstein, 1970)” - the underlying construct is considerably more complex’. | Feinstein
|
| Martin-Garcia et al.
| ‘In this study, comorbidity is defined as the co-occurrence of pre-existing age-related health conditions or diseases in one person
| Yancik et al.
|
| Nelis et al.
| ‘Co-morbidity is the term given to the presence of conditions existing concurrently with a condition considered as the primary or index disease’ | Yancik et al.
|
| Poblador-Plou et al.
| ‘patients with dementia have on average 2 to 8 additional chronic diseases (comorbidities)’ |
|
| Volicer and Hurley
| ‘Comorbidity can be defined as “any distinct clinical entity that has existed or that may occur during the clinical course of a patient who has the index disease under study”. In a strict sense, comorbidity applies only to coexistent diseases, not symptoms’. | Feinstein
|
| ‘The two main types of comorbidity are (1) random comorbidity, in which Alzheimer’s disease coexists with another disease by chance alone, and (2) epidemiological comorbidity, in which there is a relationship between prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease and other diseases’. |
|
*a priori indicates this is the researchers own definition.
†National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
Multimorbidity definitions.
| Paper reference | Definition | Definition given |
|---|---|---|
| Aldridge and Harrison Dening
| ‘multimorbidity there are more than two conditions’. | NICE
|
| Aldridge and Harrison Dening
| ‘Multimorbidity refers to the co-occurrence of two or more physical and/or psychiatric conditions experienced by an individual, which may or may not directly interact with each other’ … ‘whereas multimorbidity captures the overall complexity of patients without focusing on any single disease’ | Barnett et al.
|
| Browne et al.
| ‘Multimorbidity—the presence of two or more chronic health conditions…’ | Barnett et al.
|
| Bunn et al.
| ‘Multimorbidity - the co-occurrence of multiple chronic or acute diseases and medical conditions in one person. One condition is not necessarily more central than the other. The term encompasses multiple, potentially interacting medical and psychiatric conditions’. | Boyd and Fortin
|
| Butler et al.
| ‘These conditions are also common in multimorbidity (defined as at least two comorbid conditions) in older adults’. |
|
| Cervellati et al.
| ‘the most demented patients are affected by multimorbidity, that is the co-occurrence of multiple diseases or medical conditions within a single person’. | Valderas et al.
|
| Cunningham et al.
| ‘Multi-morbidity has been variably defined and often used interchangeably, or conflated with, comorbidity (Nicholson et al., 2019). For our purposes, multi-morbidity refers to where an individual has two or more long-term health conditions and the consequences of this’. | NICE
|
| Griffith et al.
| ‘Multimorbidity, i.e., the co-existence of 2 or more chronic conditions in the same person’ ‘The terms “comorbidity” and “multimorbidity” both refer to the occurrence of multiple chronic conditions within the same individual; …whereas the term “multimorbidity” indicates that no single condition holds priority over any of the co-occurring conditions’. | Boyd and Fortin
|
| Kaczynski et al.
| ‘Multimorbidity (the simultaneous existence of several diseases)’ | Van den Akker et al.
|
| Knight and Harrison Dening
| ‘Multimorbidity is where two or more medical conditions or disease processes that are additional to an initial diagnosis co-exist and where one is not necessarily more central than the others..’ | Boyd and Fortin
|
| Melis et al.
| ‘Multimorbidity was defined as any co-occurrence of two or more chronic conditions in the same individual’ | Van den Akker et al.
|
| Mondor et al.
| ‘The co-occurrence of multiple chronic conditions in an individual (multimorbidity)’ |
|
| Nelis et al.
| ‘Multimorbidity is the co-occurrence of two or more diseases or active health conditions that may or may not be linked by a causal relationship or with no consistent dominant index disorder’ |
|
| Quinones et al.
| ‘Co-existing, multiple chronic health conditions (multimorbidity)’ |
|
| Vogelgsang et al.
| ‘… . Although the definition of multimorbidity varies, it is commonly defined as the presence of two or more diseases or risk factors…’ | Willadsen et al.
|
*a priori indicates this is the researchers own definition.
†National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
Findings from the consultation.
| Theme | Sub-themes / further descriptions |
|---|---|
| The perspectives and experiences of PwD, carers and families |
|
| The severity and type of dementia |
|
| Psychological distress/mental health |
|
| Social health |
|
|
| |
| Polypharmacy |
|
| Environmental factors |
|
Figure 2.Syndemic framework of health in dementia.