Recommendations on Methods for Assessing Multimorbidity Changes Over Time: Aligning the Method to the Purpose

Author:

Nagel Corey L12ORCID,Bishop Nicholas J3,Botoseneanu Anda45ORCID,Allore Heather G67ORCID,Newsom Jason T8,Dorr David A9ORCID,Quiñones Ana R1011ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College of Nursing, , Little Rock, Arkansas, USA

2. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Department of Biostatistics, , Little Rock, Arkansas, USA

3. University of Arizona Norton School of Family and Consumer Sciences, , Tucson, Arizona, USA

4. University of Michigan Department of Health & Human Services, , Dearborn, Michigan, USA

5. University of Michigan Institute of Gerontology, , Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA

6. Yale University Department of Biostatistics, , New Haven, Connecticut, USA

7. Yale University Department of Internal Medicine, , New Haven, Connecticut, USA

8. Portland State University Department of Psychology, , Portland, Oregon, USA

9. Oregon Health & Science University Department of Medical Informatics and Clinical Epidemiology, , Portland, Oregon, USA

10. Oregon Health & Science University Department of Family Medicine, , Portland, Oregon, USA

11. Oregon Health & Science University OHSU-PSU School of Public Health, , Portland, Oregon, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background The rapidly growing field of multimorbidity research demonstrates that changes in multimorbidity in mid- and late-life have far reaching effects on important person-centered outcomes, such as health-related quality of life. However, there are few organizing frameworks and comparatively little work weighing the merits and limitations of various quantitative methods applied to the longitudinal study of multimorbidity. Methods We identify and discuss methods aligned to specific research objectives with the goals of (i) establishing a common language for assessing longitudinal changes in multimorbidity, (ii) illuminating gaps in our knowledge regarding multimorbidity progression and critical periods of change, and (iii) informing research to identify groups that experience different rates and divergent etiological pathways of disease progression linked to deterioration in important health-related outcomes. Results We review practical issues in the measurement of multimorbidity, longitudinal analysis of health-related data, operationalizing change over time, and discuss methods that align with 4 general typologies for research objectives in the longitudinal study of multimorbidity: (i) examine individual change in multimorbidity, (ii) identify subgroups that follow similar trajectories of multimorbidity progression, (iii) understand when, how, and why individuals or groups shift to more advanced stages of multimorbidity, and (iv) examine the coprogression of multimorbidity with key health domains. Conclusions This work encourages a systematic approach to the quantitative study of change in multimorbidity and provides a valuable resource for researchers working to measure and minimize the deleterious effects of multimorbidity on aging populations.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Yale Claude D. Pepper Older Americans Independence Center

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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