Association of chronic conditions and physical multimorbidity with new-onset incontinence in a nationwide prospective cohort study of older adults ≥ 50 years in China

Author:

Li Haibin123ORCID,Zou Xinye45,Zhang Ruolin6,Zou Siyu7,Qian Frank89,Zheng Jin10,Xiao Angela Y11,Guo Xiuhua31213ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiac Surgery , Heart Center & Beijing Key Laboratory of Hypertension, Beijing Chaoyang Hospital, , Beijing , China

2. Capital Medical University , Heart Center & Beijing Key Laboratory of Hypertension, Beijing Chaoyang Hospital, , Beijing , China

3. Beijing Municipal Key Laboratory of Clinical Epidemiology, Capital Medical University , Beijing , China

4. Cambridge Institute of Public Health , School of Clinical Medicine, , Cambridge , UK

5. University of Cambridge , School of Clinical Medicine, , Cambridge , UK

6. Department of Natural and Applied Science, Duke Kunshan University , No. 8 Duke Ave., Kunshan, Jiangsu 215316 , China

7. Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205 , USA

8. Department of Medicine , Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, , Boston, MA , USA

9. Harvard Medical School , Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, , Boston, MA , USA

10. Department of Radiology, University of Cambridge , Cambridge CB2 0QQ , UK

11. Department of International Studies, Macalester College , 1600 Grand Avenue St. Paul, St Paul, MN 55105 , USA

12. Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics , School of Public Health, , Beijing , China

13. Capital Medical University , School of Public Health, , Beijing , China

Abstract

Abstract Background The relationship between multimorbidity (i.e. ≥ 2 chronic conditions) and incontinence (i.e. urinary and/or faecal incontinence) is underexplored. This study investigated the association between multimorbidity and incident incontinence in Chinese adults aged ≥50 years. Methods Data from the 2011 and 2015 waves of the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study were used. The association between 12 chronic conditions, multimorbidity and new-onset incontinence was analysed using weighted logistic regression models. Mediation analysis was conducted to explore the potential mediators (self-reported health, subjective memory, depressive symptoms, disability, cognitive function, handgrip strength, mobility limitations, medications and frailty status) between multimorbidity and incontinence. Findings Among 9,986 individuals aged ≥50 years who were continent at baseline, 5.3% (n = 521) were newly incontinent 4 years later (incident cases). The risk of incident incontinence increased with physical multimorbidity (OR 2.04, 95% CI 1.62–2.57). Compared to no chronic condition, having 1, 2, 3 and ≥ 4 chronic conditions were associated with incident incontinence with OR (95% CI): 1.41 (1.01–1.97), 1.74 (1.24–2.44), 2.82 (1.93–4.12) and 3.99 (2.29–6.95), respectively. The association between multimorbidity and incontinence was mediated by self-reported health (41.2%), medications (26.6%), mobility limitations (20.9%), depressive symptoms (12.8%), disability (11.6%), subjective memory (8.7%) and frailty status (8.3%). Conclusion This longitudinal study found that physical multimorbidity and specific chronic conditions may increase the risk of new-onset incontinence among Chinese adults aged ≥50 years. Self-reported health, medications and mobility limitations seemed to be important intermediate conditions between multimorbidity and incident incontinence.

Funder

Clinical Research Incubation Project

Beijing Chao-Yang Hospital

Capital Medical University

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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