Implementation and external validation of the Cambridge Multimorbidity Score in the UK Biobank cohort
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Published:2024-03-20
Issue:1
Volume:24
Page:
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ISSN:1471-2288
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Container-title:BMC Medical Research Methodology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:BMC Med Res Methodol
Author:
Harrison Hannah,Ip Samantha,Renzi Cristina,Li Yangfan,Barclay Matthew,Usher-Smith Juliet,Lyratzopoulos Georgios,Wood Angela,Antoniou Antonis C.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Patients with multiple conditions present a growing challenge for healthcare provision. Measures of multimorbidity may support clinical management, healthcare resource allocation and accounting for the health of participants in purpose-designed cohorts. The recently developed Cambridge Multimorbidity scores (CMS) have the potential to achieve these aims using primary care records, however, they have not yet been validated outside of their development cohort.
Methods
The CMS, developed in the Clinical Research Practice Dataset (CPRD), were validated in UK Biobank participants whose data is not available in CPRD (the cohort used for CMS development) with available primary care records (n = 111,898). This required mapping of the 37 pre-existing conditions used in the CMS to the coding frameworks used by UK Biobank data providers. We used calibration plots and measures of discrimination to validate the CMS for two of the three outcomes used in the development study (death and primary care consultation rate) and explored variation by age and sex. We also examined the predictive ability of the CMS for the outcome of cancer diagnosis. The results were compared to an unweighted count score of the 37 pre-existing conditions.
Results
For all three outcomes considered, the CMS were poorly calibrated in UK Biobank. We observed a similar discriminative ability for the outcome of primary care consultation rate to that reported in the development study (C-index: 0.67 (95%CI:0.66–0.68) for both, 5-year follow-up); however, we report lower discrimination for the outcome of death than the development study (0.69 (0.68–0.70) and 0.89 (0.88–0.90) respectively). Discrimination for cancer diagnosis was adequate (0.64 (0.63–0.65)). The CMS performs favourably to the unweighted count score for death, but not for the outcomes of primary care consultation rate or cancer diagnosis.
Conclusions
In the UK Biobank, CMS discriminates reasonably for the outcomes of death, primary care consultation rate and cancer diagnosis and may be a valuable resource for clinicians, public health professionals and data scientists. However, recalibration will be required to make accurate predictions when cohort composition and risk levels differ substantially from the development cohort. The generated resources (including codelists for the conditions and code for CMS implementation in UK Biobank) are available online.
Funder
International Alliance for Cancer Early Detection
CRUK International Alliance for Cancer Early Detection
Cancer Research UK
Cancer Research UK - Early Detection and Diagnosis Committee
National Institute of Health Research Advanced Fellowship
British Heart Foundation
NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre
BHF-Turing Cardiovascular Data Science Award
BigData@Heart Consortium, funded by the Innovative Medicines Initiative-2 Joint Undertaking
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC