Charlson Comorbidity Index Based On Hospital Episode Statistics Performs Adequately In Predicting Mortality, But Its Discriminative Ability Diminishes Over Time

Juho Pylväläinen,1–3 Kirsi Talala,4 Teemu Murtola,5–7 Kimmo Taari,8 Jani Raitanen,1,9 Teuvo L Tammela,6 Anssi Auvinen1 1Tampere University, Faculty of Social Sciences (Health Sciences), Tampere, Finland; 2Helsinki University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of D...

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Main Authors: Pylväläinen J, Talala K, Murtola T, Taari K, Raitanen J, Tammela TL, Auvinen A
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2019-10-01
Series:Clinical Epidemiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/charlson-comorbidity-index-based-on-hospital-episode-statistics-perfor-peer-reviewed-article-CLEP
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spelling doaj-04d9d798620e4bbb80cbce81527ad8022020-11-24T21:39:38ZengDove Medical PressClinical Epidemiology1179-13492019-10-01Volume 1192393249178Charlson Comorbidity Index Based On Hospital Episode Statistics Performs Adequately In Predicting Mortality, But Its Discriminative Ability Diminishes Over TimePylväläinen JTalala KMurtola TTaari KRaitanen JTammela TLAuvinen AJuho Pylväläinen,1–3 Kirsi Talala,4 Teemu Murtola,5–7 Kimmo Taari,8 Jani Raitanen,1,9 Teuvo L Tammela,6 Anssi Auvinen1 1Tampere University, Faculty of Social Sciences (Health Sciences), Tampere, Finland; 2Helsinki University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Diagnostics and Therapeutics, Helsinki, Finland; 3Helsinki University Central Hospital, Medical Imaging Center, Helsinki, Finland; 4Cancer Society of Finland, Finnish Cancer Registry, Mass Screening Registry, Helsinki, Finland; 5Tampere University, Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology, Prostate Cancer Research Center, Tampere, Finland; 6Tampere University Hospital, Department of Urology, Tampere, Finland; 7Seinäjoki Central Hospital, Department of Surgery, Seinäjoki, Finland; 8University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital, Department of Urology, Helsinki, Finland; 9UKK Institute for Health Promotion Research, Tampere, FinlandCorrespondence: Juho PylväläinenHelsinki University Central Hospital, Medical Imaging Center, Haartmaninkatu 3, PO Box 180, 00029, Helsinki, Uusimaa, FinlandTel +358 503239286Email juho.pylvalainen@hus.fiPurpose: To evaluate the performance of Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) calculated using hospitalization and medication reimbursement databases in predicting mortality.Patients and methods: Information on hospitalizations was obtained from the national Care Register for Health Care (HILMO) and on medication reimbursements and entitlements for special reimbursements for medications from the Social Insurance Institution for 77,440 men aged 56–71 years at baseline. The subjects were followed up for mortality via Statistics Finland with 20,562 deaths during a 13-year follow-up.Results: Compared to a CCI score of 0, the age-adjusted hazard ratio for all-cause mortality associated with HILMO-based CCI scores of 1, 2 and 3 or more were 2.39 (95% CI 2.29–2.49), 2.96 (95% CI 2.81–3.13) and 6.42 (95% CI 5.95–6.93) at 13 years. The C-statistic was 0.72 at 1, 0.68 at 5 and 0.66 at 13 years, with only minor improvement over age alone (0.10, 0.06 and 0.04 accordingly). Addition of medication data did not improve predictive abilities and medication-based CCI performed poorly on its own.Conclusion: The hospitalization-based CCI, as well as that based on both databases, predicts relative mortality adequately, but its discriminative ability diminishes over time. Conditions related to hospitalizations affect survival more than medications.Keywords: mortality, comorbidity, follow-up studies, hospitalization/statistics and numerical data, drug prescriptions/statistics and numerical data, confounding factorshttps://www.dovepress.com/charlson-comorbidity-index-based-on-hospital-episode-statistics-perfor-peer-reviewed-article-CLEPmortalitycomorbidityfollow-up studieshospitalization/statistics and numerical dataDrug Prescriptions /statistics and numerical dataconfounding factors (Epidemiology)
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pylväläinen J
Talala K
Murtola T
Taari K
Raitanen J
Tammela TL
Auvinen A
spellingShingle Pylväläinen J
Talala K
Murtola T
Taari K
Raitanen J
Tammela TL
Auvinen A
Charlson Comorbidity Index Based On Hospital Episode Statistics Performs Adequately In Predicting Mortality, But Its Discriminative Ability Diminishes Over Time
Clinical Epidemiology
mortality
comorbidity
follow-up studies
hospitalization/statistics and numerical data
Drug Prescriptions /statistics and numerical data
confounding factors (Epidemiology)
author_facet Pylväläinen J
Talala K
Murtola T
Taari K
Raitanen J
Tammela TL
Auvinen A
author_sort Pylväläinen J
title Charlson Comorbidity Index Based On Hospital Episode Statistics Performs Adequately In Predicting Mortality, But Its Discriminative Ability Diminishes Over Time
title_short Charlson Comorbidity Index Based On Hospital Episode Statistics Performs Adequately In Predicting Mortality, But Its Discriminative Ability Diminishes Over Time
title_full Charlson Comorbidity Index Based On Hospital Episode Statistics Performs Adequately In Predicting Mortality, But Its Discriminative Ability Diminishes Over Time
title_fullStr Charlson Comorbidity Index Based On Hospital Episode Statistics Performs Adequately In Predicting Mortality, But Its Discriminative Ability Diminishes Over Time
title_full_unstemmed Charlson Comorbidity Index Based On Hospital Episode Statistics Performs Adequately In Predicting Mortality, But Its Discriminative Ability Diminishes Over Time
title_sort charlson comorbidity index based on hospital episode statistics performs adequately in predicting mortality, but its discriminative ability diminishes over time
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Clinical Epidemiology
issn 1179-1349
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Juho Pylväläinen,1–3 Kirsi Talala,4 Teemu Murtola,5–7 Kimmo Taari,8 Jani Raitanen,1,9 Teuvo L Tammela,6 Anssi Auvinen1 1Tampere University, Faculty of Social Sciences (Health Sciences), Tampere, Finland; 2Helsinki University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Diagnostics and Therapeutics, Helsinki, Finland; 3Helsinki University Central Hospital, Medical Imaging Center, Helsinki, Finland; 4Cancer Society of Finland, Finnish Cancer Registry, Mass Screening Registry, Helsinki, Finland; 5Tampere University, Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology, Prostate Cancer Research Center, Tampere, Finland; 6Tampere University Hospital, Department of Urology, Tampere, Finland; 7Seinäjoki Central Hospital, Department of Surgery, Seinäjoki, Finland; 8University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital, Department of Urology, Helsinki, Finland; 9UKK Institute for Health Promotion Research, Tampere, FinlandCorrespondence: Juho PylväläinenHelsinki University Central Hospital, Medical Imaging Center, Haartmaninkatu 3, PO Box 180, 00029, Helsinki, Uusimaa, FinlandTel +358 503239286Email juho.pylvalainen@hus.fiPurpose: To evaluate the performance of Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) calculated using hospitalization and medication reimbursement databases in predicting mortality.Patients and methods: Information on hospitalizations was obtained from the national Care Register for Health Care (HILMO) and on medication reimbursements and entitlements for special reimbursements for medications from the Social Insurance Institution for 77,440 men aged 56–71 years at baseline. The subjects were followed up for mortality via Statistics Finland with 20,562 deaths during a 13-year follow-up.Results: Compared to a CCI score of 0, the age-adjusted hazard ratio for all-cause mortality associated with HILMO-based CCI scores of 1, 2 and 3 or more were 2.39 (95% CI 2.29–2.49), 2.96 (95% CI 2.81–3.13) and 6.42 (95% CI 5.95–6.93) at 13 years. The C-statistic was 0.72 at 1, 0.68 at 5 and 0.66 at 13 years, with only minor improvement over age alone (0.10, 0.06 and 0.04 accordingly). Addition of medication data did not improve predictive abilities and medication-based CCI performed poorly on its own.Conclusion: The hospitalization-based CCI, as well as that based on both databases, predicts relative mortality adequately, but its discriminative ability diminishes over time. Conditions related to hospitalizations affect survival more than medications.Keywords: mortality, comorbidity, follow-up studies, hospitalization/statistics and numerical data, drug prescriptions/statistics and numerical data, confounding factors
topic mortality
comorbidity
follow-up studies
hospitalization/statistics and numerical data
Drug Prescriptions /statistics and numerical data
confounding factors (Epidemiology)
url https://www.dovepress.com/charlson-comorbidity-index-based-on-hospital-episode-statistics-perfor-peer-reviewed-article-CLEP
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