Open Access
Open access
Cancer Control, volume 30, pages 107327482211503

Multimorbidity and Complexity Among Patients with Cancer in Ontario: A Retrospective Cohort Study Exploring the Clustering of 17 Chronic Conditions with Cancer

Anna Péfoyo Koné 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
Deborah Scharf 1, 2, 6
Amy Tan 7
2
 
Behavioural Research and Northern Community Health Evaluative Services (BRANCHES), Thunder Bay, ON, Canada
3
 
Health System Performance Network (HSPN), Toronto, ON, Canada
4
 
Centre for Education and Research on Aging and Health (CERAH), Thunder Bay, ON, Canada
5
 
Centre for Rural and Northern Health Research (CRaNHR), Thunder Bay, ON, Canada
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-01-12
Journal: Cancer Control
scimago Q2
SJR0.698
CiteScore3.8
Impact factor2.5
ISSN10732748, 15262359
Oncology
General Medicine
Hematology
Abstract
Background

Multimorbidity is a concern for people living with cancer, as over 90% have at least one other condition. Multimorbidity complicates care coming from multiple providers who work within separate, siloed systems. Information describing high-risk and high-cost disease combinations has potential to improve the experience, outcome, and overall cost of care by informing comprehensive care management frameworks. This study aimed to identify disease combinations among people with cancer and other conditions, and to assess the health burden associated with those combinations to help healthcare providers more effectively prioritize and coordinate care.

Methods

We used a population-based retrospective cohort design including adults with a cancer diagnosis between March-2003 and April-2013, followed-up until March 2018. We used observed disease combinations defined by level of multimorbidity and partitive (k-means) clusters, ie groupings of similar diseases based on the prevalence of each condition. We assessed disease combination-associated health burden through health service utilization, including emergency department visits, primary care visits and hospital admissions during the follow-up period.

Results

549,248 adults were included in the study. Anxiety, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and osteoarthritis co-occurred with cancer 1.1 to 5.3 times more often than expected by chance. Disease combinations varied by cancer type and age but were similar between sexes. The largest partitive cluster included cancer and anxiety, with at least 25% of individuals also having osteoarthritis. Cancer also tended to co-occur with hypertension (8.0%) or osteoarthritis (6.2%). There were differences between clusters in healthcare utilization, regardless of the number of disease combinations or clustering approach used.

Conclusion

Researchers, clinicians, policymakers, and other stakeholders can use the clustering information presented here to improve the healthcare system for people with cancer multimorbidity by developing cluster-specific care management and clinical guidelines for common disease combinations.

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