2022
DOI: 10.1177/26335565221122025
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The effect of disease onset chronology on mortality among patients with multimorbidity: A Danish nationwide register study

Abstract: 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… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Differences between these clusters were mainly due to clinical manifestations, with Cluster 5 showing earlier MDD onset and the highest risk of schizophrenia; Cluster 6 showed later MDD onset accompanied by an increased risk of stress-related behavioural problems and somatoform disorders. This pattern of high MDD risk combined with multimorbidities and poor lifestyle habits might contribute to the worst outcomes, as a high multimorbidity burden has a deleterious effect on the clinical course of MDD 20 , and the quality of life is dramatically lower in depression patients with chronic physical conditions 21 . A recent analysis confirmed this pattern of known behavioural risk factors for depression using UKB data, proposing that inflammatory processes are a common neurobiological pathway 22 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Differences between these clusters were mainly due to clinical manifestations, with Cluster 5 showing earlier MDD onset and the highest risk of schizophrenia; Cluster 6 showed later MDD onset accompanied by an increased risk of stress-related behavioural problems and somatoform disorders. This pattern of high MDD risk combined with multimorbidities and poor lifestyle habits might contribute to the worst outcomes, as a high multimorbidity burden has a deleterious effect on the clinical course of MDD 20 , and the quality of life is dramatically lower in depression patients with chronic physical conditions 21 . A recent analysis confirmed this pattern of known behavioural risk factors for depression using UKB data, proposing that inflammatory processes are a common neurobiological pathway 22 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, addressing chronic comorbidity poses a significant challenge in this regard. Chronic comorbidity refers to an individual's long-term co-occurrence of two or more chronic diseases (5)(6)(7). Compared with a single chronic disease, chronic disease comorbidity will worsen and reduce the QoL of the older adults, leading to the decline of patients' physical function, QoL, disease burden, etc.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%