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Multimorbidity patterns and 5-year overall mortality: Results from a claims data-based observational study.

Background: Multimorbidity is prevalent and related to adverse outcomes. The effect on mortality is disputed, possibly because studies show differences in the diseases which operationalize multimorbidity. The aim of this study is to analyze the effects of three multimorbidity patterns (representing subgroups of diseases) on mortality.

Methods: We conducted a longitudinal observational study based on insurance claims data of ambulatory care from 2005 to 2009. Analyses are based on 46 chronic conditions with a prevalence ≥1%. We included 52,217 females and 71,007 males aged 65+ and insured by the Gmünder ErsatzKasse throughout 2004. Our outcome was 5-year overall mortality documented as exact time of death. We calculated hazard ratios by Cox regression analyses with time-dependent covariates. Three statistical models were analyzed: (a) the individual diseases, (b) the number of diseases in multimorbidity patterns, and (c) a count of all diseases, all calculated separately for genders and adjusted for age.

Results: During the study period, 12,473 males (17.6%) and 7,457 females (14.3%) died. The general effect of multimorbidity on mortality was small (females: 1.02, 1.01-1.02; males: 1.04, 1.03-1.04). The number of neuropsychiatric disorders was related to higher mortality (1.33, 1.30-1.36; 1.46, 1.43-1.50). Cardiovascular and metabolic disorders had inconsistent effects (0.99, 0.97-1.01; 1.08, 1.07-1.09). Psychiatric, psychosomatic, and pain-related disorders were related to higher life expectancy (0.87, 0.86-0.89; 0.88, 0.87-0.90).

Conclusions: Chronic diseases have heterogeneous effects on mortality and generalized measures of multimorbidity reflect and even out the effects of the single diseases. In multimorbidity studies, a careful selection of diseases is therefore important.

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