The effects of comorbidity on the benefits and harms of treatment for chronic disease: a systematic review.

There are concerns about the potential for unintentional harms when clinical practice guidelines are applied to patients with multimorbidity. The objective was to summarize the evidence regarding the effect(s) of comorbidity on the outcomes of medication for an index chronic condition.A systematic r...

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Main Authors: Terri R Fried, John O'Leary, Virginia Towle, Mary K Goldstein, Mark Trentelange, Deanna K Martin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4234418?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-55554f4bec0c48aa8abb5398fc30fc5d2020-11-25T00:08:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01911e11259310.1371/journal.pone.0112593The effects of comorbidity on the benefits and harms of treatment for chronic disease: a systematic review.Terri R FriedJohn O'LearyVirginia TowleMary K GoldsteinMark TrentelangeDeanna K MartinThere are concerns about the potential for unintentional harms when clinical practice guidelines are applied to patients with multimorbidity. The objective was to summarize the evidence regarding the effect(s) of comorbidity on the outcomes of medication for an index chronic condition.A systematic review was conducted of studies published in MEDLINE and Cochrane Trials before May 2012. The search strategy was constructed to identify articles indexed with "comorbidity" or a related term or by a given condition and one or more additional specified comorbid conditions. The search yielded 3252 articles, of which 37 passed the title/abstract screening process, and 22 were included after full-text review. An additional 23 articles were identified by screening the reference lists for included articles. Information was extracted on study design; population; therapy; comparison groups; outcome(s); main findings.Indexing of articles was inconsistent, with no term for "multimorbidity," and rare use of "comorbidity". Only one article examined the effects of comorbidity per se, finding no benefit of tight control of DM among persons with high comorbidity, defined using a comorbidity index. The remainder examined pairs of conditions, the majority of which were post-hoc analyses of randomized controlled trials and which found no difference in outcomes according to whether a comorbid condition was present. Several demonstrated no difference or an increased risk of adverse outcome among persons with DM and tight control of HTN as compared to usual control. Several demonstrated lack of benefit of statins among persons with end-stage renal disease.There is limited evidence regarding the effects of multiple comorbidities on treatment outcomes. The majority of studies demonstrated no effect of a single comorbid condition on outcomes. Additional studies examining a broad range of comorbidity are required, along with clear and consistent indexing to allow for improved synthesis of the evidence.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4234418?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Terri R Fried
John O'Leary
Virginia Towle
Mary K Goldstein
Mark Trentelange
Deanna K Martin
spellingShingle Terri R Fried
John O'Leary
Virginia Towle
Mary K Goldstein
Mark Trentelange
Deanna K Martin
The effects of comorbidity on the benefits and harms of treatment for chronic disease: a systematic review.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Terri R Fried
John O'Leary
Virginia Towle
Mary K Goldstein
Mark Trentelange
Deanna K Martin
author_sort Terri R Fried
title The effects of comorbidity on the benefits and harms of treatment for chronic disease: a systematic review.
title_short The effects of comorbidity on the benefits and harms of treatment for chronic disease: a systematic review.
title_full The effects of comorbidity on the benefits and harms of treatment for chronic disease: a systematic review.
title_fullStr The effects of comorbidity on the benefits and harms of treatment for chronic disease: a systematic review.
title_full_unstemmed The effects of comorbidity on the benefits and harms of treatment for chronic disease: a systematic review.
title_sort effects of comorbidity on the benefits and harms of treatment for chronic disease: a systematic review.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description There are concerns about the potential for unintentional harms when clinical practice guidelines are applied to patients with multimorbidity. The objective was to summarize the evidence regarding the effect(s) of comorbidity on the outcomes of medication for an index chronic condition.A systematic review was conducted of studies published in MEDLINE and Cochrane Trials before May 2012. The search strategy was constructed to identify articles indexed with "comorbidity" or a related term or by a given condition and one or more additional specified comorbid conditions. The search yielded 3252 articles, of which 37 passed the title/abstract screening process, and 22 were included after full-text review. An additional 23 articles were identified by screening the reference lists for included articles. Information was extracted on study design; population; therapy; comparison groups; outcome(s); main findings.Indexing of articles was inconsistent, with no term for "multimorbidity," and rare use of "comorbidity". Only one article examined the effects of comorbidity per se, finding no benefit of tight control of DM among persons with high comorbidity, defined using a comorbidity index. The remainder examined pairs of conditions, the majority of which were post-hoc analyses of randomized controlled trials and which found no difference in outcomes according to whether a comorbid condition was present. Several demonstrated no difference or an increased risk of adverse outcome among persons with DM and tight control of HTN as compared to usual control. Several demonstrated lack of benefit of statins among persons with end-stage renal disease.There is limited evidence regarding the effects of multiple comorbidities on treatment outcomes. The majority of studies demonstrated no effect of a single comorbid condition on outcomes. Additional studies examining a broad range of comorbidity are required, along with clear and consistent indexing to allow for improved synthesis of the evidence.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4234418?pdf=render
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