Abstract

BackgroundThe co-occurrence of two or more medical conditions in the same individual is not uncommon. If disability-adjusted life year (DALY) calculations are carried out for each condition separately, multimorbidity may lead to an overestimation of the morbidity component, the Years Lived with Disability (YLD). Adjusting for comorbidity may be straightforward if all symptoms have same onset and duration; however, when the comorbid health states occur at different time points, an analytical solution to the comorbidity problem becomes more complex. The aim of this study was to develop an individual-based modelling (IBM) approach to adjust incidence-based disease burden estimation for multimorbidity that allows simulating hypothetical individuals and tracking their disease history, including possible comorbidities, over time.MethodsWe demonstrated the IBM approach using an example of external comorbidity, i.e., colon cancer comorbid with healthcare-associated pneumonia (HAP) and by assuming an independent multiplicative model. First, each cumulative progression probabilities were converted to a daily transition probabilities. Second, disability weights for simultaneously experienced health states and duration in each health state were determined. Third, YLD, adjusted for comorbidity, was calculated at every time step. We simulated a cohort of 1000 colorectal cancer patients aged 65 years. Ninety-five percent uncertainty intervals around median YLD values were estimated by Monte Carlo methods.ResultsThe median estimated YLD per 1000 cases (due to both cancer and HAP) adjusted for co-morbidity was 545 YLD/1000 (95% interval: 513–585). The impact of not adjusting disability weights for co-existent health states varied from minimal to small; YLD for colorectal cancer would be overestimated only slightly – by 1.6 YLD/1000 – by not adjusting for concurrent HAP. YLD for those HAP patients who have concurrent early-stage colorectal cancer would be overestimated by 2.3 YLD/1000.ConclusionsThe computation of disease burden in the presence of multimorbidity using the incidence-based DALY approach can be handled through IBM. Our approach can be extended to other, more complicated multimorbidity scenarios which are responsible for a high current global disease burden, such as tuberculosis and HIV infection.

Highlights

  • The co-occurrence of two or more medical conditions in the same individual is not uncommon

  • The morbidity burden computed for cancer among a cohort of colorectal cancer patients in which healthcare-associated pneumonia (HAP) was co-existent was slightly higher (1.6 Years Lived with Disability (YLD)/1000 cases; relative 0.3%) when not adjusting for comorbidity

  • The morbidity burden attributable to HAP among a cohort of cancer patients in which HAP co-occurred was slightly overestimated, by 2.3 YLD/1000, if disability weights were not adjusted for comorbidity

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Summary

Introduction

The co-occurrence of two or more medical conditions in the same individual is not uncommon. The co-occurrence of two or more medical conditions in the same individual is not uncommon, especially in the elderly [1]. If disability-adjusted life year (DALY) calculations are carried out for each condition separately, multimorbidity may lead to an overestimation of the morbidity component, the Years Lived with Disability (YLD). Without adjusting for multimorbidity, the DW for this patient would implicitly be calculated as the sum of both DWs, i.e., 0.117 + 0.225 = 0.342. Assuming that DWs can be summed to capture the level of disability experienced by a patient with multimorbidity, is not necessarily correct [4, 5]. Additivity could lead to a multimorbid DW that is larger than one, i.e., a situation “worse than death”

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