Clinical, socioeconomic, and behavioural factors at age 50 years and risk of cardiometabolic multimorbidity and mortality: A cohort study
Archana Singh-Manoux and colleagues report on the contribution that midlife socioeconomic and behavioural factors make to multimorbidity and mortality in those with cardiometabolic disease.
Published in the journal:
Clinical, socioeconomic, and behavioural factors at age 50 years and risk of cardiometabolic multimorbidity and mortality: A cohort study. PLoS Med 15(5): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1002571
Category:
Research Article
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002571
Summary
Archana Singh-Manoux and colleagues report on the contribution that midlife socioeconomic and behavioural factors make to multimorbidity and mortality in those with cardiometabolic disease.
Introduction
Multimorbidity refers to the co-occurrence of multiple chronic conditions in the same person [1], and is known to increase with age [2–11]. Multimorbidity is associated with poor quality of life, higher healthcare costs, and greater risk of disability and mortality [11,12]; the effects of multimorbidity on adverse outcomes for the patient and the healthcare system are greater than might be expected from chronic conditions occurring on their own [11,13–15]. A recent study on cardiometabolic multimorbidity, defined using diabetes, coronary heart disease (CHD), and stroke, found each additional disease to double the risk of death [4].
Studies on risk factors for multimorbidity have shown the importance of clinical risk factors [16,17], socioeconomic factors [3,8,16,18], and behavioural factors [16,19,20], but it remains unclear whether these factors affect the risk of developing a first chronic condition or progression to multimorbidity. In addition, although prognostic studies show greater risk of adverse outcomes in those with multimorbidity, the factors that modify this risk remain unknown. A further limitation of previous research is the piecemeal approach, where studies examine the risk factors for multimorbidity and the prognosis of multimorbidity in separate analyses, often with cross-sectional data used to examine the former. Thus, the characteristics that adversely affect temporal progression from a first chronic disease to multimorbidity and subsequent mortality are unknown. The identification of such factors would pave the way for interventions that target the specific factors associated with the incidence and prognosis of multimorbidity.
In order to address some of these limitations, we examined the role of clinical, socioeconomic, and behavioural factors at age 50 years in the transitions from a healthy state to first cardiometabolic disease, cardiometabolic multimorbidity, and subsequent mortality using data spanning 30 years. The main focus of our analyses was the relative importance of clusters of clinical, social, and behavioural risk factors; however, we also examined the associations of individual behavioural and clinical risk factors with transitions.
Methods
Study population
Participants were drawn from the Whitehall II study, an ongoing cohort study of 10,308 persons (6,895 men and 3,413 women), aged 35–55 years at study recruitment in 1985 [21]. At baseline, participants responded to a questionnaire and underwent a structured clinical evaluation consisting of measures of anthropometry, cardiovascular and metabolic risk factors, and diseases. Follow-up clinical assessments have taken place approximately every 4–5 years (1991, 1997, 2002, 2007, 2012, and 2015), with every wave taking approximately 2 years to complete. Informed, written consent from participants and research ethics approvals (University College London [UCL] ethics committee) are renewed at each contact; the latest approval was by the Joint UCL/UCLH Committee on the Ethics of Human Research (Committee Alpha), reference number 85/0938.
Assessment of risk factors
We extracted data on risk factors at the clinical examination closest to age 50 years, allowing a ±5-year margin, to remove the effect of baseline age in our estimates. This was done by using data from the first 4 waves of the study (in 1985, 1991, 1997, and 2002) when the age range of participants was 35–55, 40–64, 45–69, and 50–74 years. Thus, follow-up started at age 50 for all participants, and analyses were restricted to those free of cardiometabolic disease (diabetes, CHD, stroke) at age 50. Three sets of risk factors were examined, each on a 5-point scale, with 0 denoting the lowest risk, and 4 the highest risk.
Clinical profile was assessed using 4 measures, with thresholds defined using World Health Organization guidelines. Hypertension was defined as systolic blood pressure ≥ 140 mm Hg, diastolic blood pressure ≥ 90 mm Hg, or use of antihypertensive medication. Blood pressure was assessed as part of the clinical examination as the mean of 2 measurements taken using a Hawksley random zero sphygmomanometer with the participant in the sitting position after 5 minutes of rest. Overweight/obesity was defined as BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2; weight was measured in underwear to the nearest 0.1 kg on Soehnle electronic scales with digital readout (Leifheit, Nassau, Germany), and height was measured in bare feet to the nearest 1 mm using a stadiometer with the participant standing erect with the head in the Frankfurt plane. Hypercholesterolemia was defined as total cholesterol ≥ 5 mmol/l. Venous blood samples were taken after at least 5 hours of fasting, and serum obtained after centrifugation was refrigerated at 4°C and assayed within 72 hours of the blood draw. Total cholesterol was measured using a Cobas Fara centrifugal analyzer (Roche Diagnostics, Nutley, NJ). Finally, family history (parent or sibling) of diabetes and cardiovascular disease was reported as part of the study questionnaire.
The socioeconomic marker for the main analysis was occupational position, which in our study is the British Civil Service grade of employment—a comprehensive measure that reflects education, occupational status, and income, composed of a 5-level variable [21]. In sensitivity analyses we replaced occupational position with education, measured as the highest qualification on leaving full-time education (no academic qualifications, lower secondary school, higher secondary school, university, higher degree).
Behavioural factors considered were smoking, alcohol consumption, fruit and vegetable consumption, and physical activity. Each behaviour was scored as unhealthy (1 point) if recommended targets were not achieved and, in the case of dietary behaviour, to reflect previous categorisation of this measure [22]; the scores were summed to yield an unhealthy behaviour 5-point scale. The criteria for classifying participants as not achieving recommended behavioural targets were as follows: current smoking, alcohol abstention (<1 unit/week) or heavy alcohol consumption (>21 alcohol units/week in men and >14 alcohol units/week in women), poor diet (fruit and vegetable consumption < 1 serving/day), being physically inactive (<2.5 hours/week of moderate or vigorous physical activity) [23].
Covariates included age, sex, race (white, non-white), marital status (single, non-single), and birth cohort (4 categories: ≤1935, 1936–1940, 1941–1945, >1945).
Ascertainment of cardiometabolic diseases and multimorbidity
Incidence of cardiometabolic multimorbidity [4], defined as at least 2 of CHD, stroke, and diabetes, was based on data from the clinical assessments between 1985 and 2016 and linkage (until 31 August 2017) to the national Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) database with in- and outpatient data, undertaken using the National Health Service (NHS) identification number. In the UK, the NHS provides most of the healthcare; private medical insurance is held by around 12% of the population (1997 figures) [24] and is used mainly for elective surgery rather than chronic conditions. The HES database contains the exact date of diagnosis (hospitalisation/outpatient visit), allowing greater precision in the time of follow-up.
Whitehall II ascertained non-fatal CHD based on 12-lead resting ECG recordings, coded using the Minnesota system, and on self-reported CHD that was corroborated with information from the general practitioner or manual retrieval of hospital records. The ascertainment included non-fatal myocardial infarction, definite angina, reported coronary artery bypass grafting, and percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. HES ascertainment was based on in- or outpatient hospital consultations with ICD-9 codes 410–414, ICD-10 codes I20–I25, or procedures K40–K49, K50, K75, U19 (Office of Population Censuses and Surveys Classification of Interventions and Procedures codes for all intra-hospital medical and surgical procedures for treatment of CHD).
Stroke cases were defined using ICD-9 codes 430, 431, 434, or 436 or ICD-10 codes I60–I64 from HES records and self-reported stroke, which was validated against medical records [25].
Diagnosis of type 2 diabetes was based on the following diagnostic criteria: having fasting glucose ≥ 7.0 mmol/l (126 mg/dl) or 2-hour plasma glucose ≥ 11.1 mmol/l (200 mg/dl), reported physician-diagnosed diabetes, use of diabetes medication, or HES record of diabetes (ICD-9 code 250 or ICD-10 code E11).
Mortality follow-up
Mortality data until 31 August 2017 were drawn from the British national mortality register (NHS Central Register). The tracing exercise was carried out using the NHS identification number of each participant.
Statistical analysis
To allow comparisons with other findings and demonstrate the value of our analytic approach, we first used Cox regression to examine the association of risk factors (occupation, behavioural factors, and clinical profile) with incidence of first cardiometabolic disease (any of the 3), multimorbidity, and mortality. Participants were followed starting at age 50 years until the record of death or 31 August 2017, whichever came first.
All risk factor scales were on a 5-point scale where they were first treated as categorical variables (0, 1, 2, 3, or 4, where 0 indicates no risk factors/lowest risk category and 4 indicates all 4 risk factors/highest risk category). As none of the associations showed evidence of departure from linearity, we entered the risk factor scales as a continuous 5-level variable to assess the impact of clustering of risk factors. The reported hazard corresponds to the increased risk of the outcome (first cardiometabolic disease, multimorbidity, or mortality; separate analyses) in those with the highest (score of 4, the maximum score) compared to the lowest risk (score on scale = 0). The proportional hazard assumptions for Cox regression models, tested using Schoenfeld residuals, were found not to be violated.
In subsequent analyses, we examined the role of the 3 risk factor scales (socioeconomic, behavioural, and clinical) at age 50 in the temporal disease progression from being free of cardiometabolic disease to first cardiometabolic disease, cardiometabolic multimorbidity, and death. These analyses were carried out using unidirectional multi-state models (MSMs) with Markov proportional hazards [26,27]. These models are an extension of competing risks survival analysis, allowing simultaneous estimation of the role of risk factors (here socioeconomic, behavioural, and clinical profile scales) in the transitions (for schematic representation see Fig 1) from (A) healthy to first cardiometabolic disease, (B) first cardiometabolic disease to cardiometabolic multimorbidity, (C) healthy state to death, (D) first cardiometabolic disease to death, and (E) cardiometabolic multimorbidity to death. The focus on these 5 transitions rather than all possible transitions in health states was pre-planned; an extract from our funding application can be found in S1 Protocol.
We also report the associations of the individual risk factors included in the behavioural and clinical scales in both the Cox regression models and MSMs. In all the analyses, age was used as the timescale, and analyses were additionally adjusted for sex, race, marital status, and birth cohort (Model 1). The mutually adjusted models (Model 2) contained all covariates in Model 1 and all risk factor scales (socioeconomic, behavioural, and clinical). Sex differences were tested using an interaction term between the risk factor scale and sex for both the Cox regression and the MSM analysis.
We repeated all the analyses with education replacing occupational position as a marker of socioeconomic position, as education is a more widely available measure of socioeconomic circumstances in most studies. The MSMs were run using the “mstate” package of R software; all other analyses used Stata version 14. A 2-sided p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. This study is reported as per STROBE guidelines (S1 Checklist).
Results
The analyses were based on 8,270 of the 10,308 participants recruited to the study in 1985 (flowchart in S1 Fig), followed over a mean 23.7 (SD = 5.9) years. As all risk factors were drawn at around age 50 years, participants older than this at baseline, those who dropped out of the study before reaching this age, and those with missing data on risk factors at age 50 were excluded from the analysis (N = 1,581). Table 1 presents the sample characteristics at age 50 as a function of cardiometabolic multimorbidity and mortality status at the end of follow-up; these characteristics in relation to the 3 individual diseases considered in the analyses (diabetes, CHD, and stroke) are shown in S1 Table.
A total of 2,501 (30.2%) of the 8,270 participants included in the analyses experienced 1 of the 3 cardiometabolic diseases, 511 participants met the criteria of multimorbidity, and 1,406 participants died over the follow-up period, with the mean age (SD) at death being 70.0 (8.6) years. Both first cardiometabolic disease (hazard ratio [HR]: 1.81; 95% CI: 1.61–2.03; mean [SD] follow-up 10.8 [7.4] years) and cardiometabolic multimorbidity (HR: 2.36; 95% CI: 1.97–2.81; mean [SD] follow-up 6.9 [5.8] years), treated as time-varying covariates in Cox regression analysis adjusted for age, sex, race, marital status, and birth cohort, were associated with increased risk of mortality over the follow-up period (S2 Table).
In Cox regression, all individual behavioural and clinical risk factors were associated with first cardiometabolic disease (S3 Table). Overweight/obesity had the strongest association with first cardiometabolic disease, and smoking the strongest association with both cardiometabolic multimorbidity and mortality. Table 2 shows the gradient in the association between each risk score and the outcomes, justifying the use of a linear scale to assess risk in those at highest compared to lowest risk. All 3 risk scales (clinical, socioeconomic, and behavioural) at age 50 had a robust association with incidence of a first cardiometabolic disease, cardiometabolic multimorbidity, and mortality in analysis using Cox regression (Table 2); men and women were combined as there was no clear evidence of systematic sex differences (interaction terms in the footnotes of Table 2). For morbidity outcomes, the strongest associations were seen with the clinical profile scale for both first cardiometabolic disease (HR: 3.74; 95% CI: 3.14–4.46) and cardiometabolic multimorbidity (HR: 3.68; 95% CI: 2.49–5.43), with the magnitude of these associations, which estimate excess risk in those with highest compared to lowest score on the risk factor score, being very similar. The association of occupation and behavioural factors with incidence of multimorbidity was stronger than that with first cardiometabolic disease: HR of 2.43 versus 1.57 for the occupational scale and 3.02 versus 1.60 for the behavioural scale.
Table 2 also shows the associations of the risk factors with mortality using Cox regression. Of the 3 risk factors, behavioural factors had the strongest association with mortality (HR of 3.16 in those with all adverse behaviours compared to those with none; 95% CI: 2.57–3.90), although both occupation and clinical profile were also associated with mortality. As with first cardiometabolic disease and multimorbidity, the linearity of associations underpins the use of the risk scale to compare mortality risk in those with the highest compared to the lowest risk. Mutual adjustment of risk factors (S4 Table) did not substantially alter associations with morbidity or mortality.
Subsequent analyses estimated the role of risk factors in the transitions shown in Fig 1. We first examined associations of individual behavioural and clinical risk factors with the transitions, which showed smoking to be the only risk factor that was important for all 5 transitions (Table 3). Subsequent analyses focused on risk factor scales; Table 4 shows the results of these analyses, and when all 3 risk factor scales (Model 2) were considered simultaneously, clinical profile had the strongest association (HR of 3.74 in those with all 4 risk factors compared to none; 95% CI: 3.14–4.45) with the incidence of first disease (diabetes, CHD, or stroke) (transition A). However, in those with a first cardiometabolic disease, it was not associated with increased risk of multimorbidity (transition B; HR: 1.29; 95% CI: 0.86–1.94). Both occupational disadvantage and adverse behavioural factors were associated with increased hazard of multimorbidity in those with a first cardiometabolic disease (transition B). Within this framework that modelled all transitions simultaneously, behavioural factors had the strongest association with prognostic transitions, i.e., transitions leading to death. This was true for transitions to death in participants without cardiometabolic diseases (transition C; HR: 2.87; 95% CI: 2.19–3.77), those with 1 cardiometabolic disease (transition D; HR: 2.12; 95% CI: 1.41–3.18), and those with multimorbidity (transition E; HR: 3.47; 95% CI: 1.81–6.66; all estimates from Model 2).
In sensitivity analyses, we examined the role of risk factor scales in transitions separately in men and women (S5 Table). These results show small differences in the role of occupational position but no differences for behavioural or clinical risk factor scales. In further analyses, we used education rather than occupation as a marker of socioeconomic circumstances (S6 Table); these results were broadly consistent with our main findings.
Discussion
The emerging body of research on multimorbidity has assessed the role of risk factors for multimorbidity [3,6,8,16–20] or examined the risk of mortality in those with multimorbidity [4]. In contrast, we examined the role of clinical, socioeconomic, and behavioural risk factors at age 50 years in modifying transitions in health using MSMs, an approach that allows the assessment of both etiological and prognostic factors within a single analytic framework. We present 3 key findings. One, clinical parameters were the strongest predictors of the incidence of a first cardiometabolic disease, but they played a more modest role in progression from a single disease to cardiometabolic multimorbidity or risk of mortality in those with cardiometabolic multimorbidity. Two, midlife socioeconomic and behavioural factors were found to be important predictors of multimorbidity in those with existing cardiometabolic disease. Three, midlife behavioural factors were important predictors of mortality in those free of cardiometabolic diseases, those with 1 cardiometabolic disease, and those with cardiometabolic multimorbidity: the respective HRs for those with the worst compared to the best behavioural profile all exceed 2, indicating their considerable impact on mortality risk.
The objective of our analysis was to identify how known clinical, socioeconomic, and behavioural risk factors shape the course of cardiometabolic disease. The precise pathophysiological mechanisms underlying the association of risk factors with disease incidence and prognosis were not examined. Each of our 3 main findings has implications for prevention and care of persons with cardiometabolic disease. The importance of clinical parameters, individually and when considered as a scale for their combined impact, for the incidence of a first cardiometabolic disease suggests that basic clinical factors are not yet being targeted sufficiently in primary prevention. The decline in deaths from cardiovascular disease in high-income countries is attributed in large part to such prevention strategies [28,29]. However, our data show large variation in clinical factors and that an adverse clinical profile is associated with a 3.7-fold greater hazard of a first cardiometabolic disease in fully adjusted analyses. These findings should encourage further efforts to promote lower body weight, blood pressure, and total cholesterol.
Our second finding highlights the role of socioeconomic and behavioural factors as being important predictors of multimorbidity in those with pre-existing cardiometabolic disease. Much of the research on multimorbidity has attempted to identify risk factors for multimorbidity, but not specifically the factors that lead to multimorbidity in those with a first cardiometabolic disease. Previous studies have shown socioeconomic factors [3,11] and behavioural factors [16,19,20] to be associated with multimorbidity; however, some of these studies were cross-sectional [3,11,19,30,31] and used self-reported measures of multimorbidity [19]. No previous study to our knowledge has examined the role of risk factors in the progression from 1 disease to multimorbidity and death within a single analytic framework. The conventional approach, demonstrated in our analyses using Cox regression (Table 2), suggests that the clustering of clinical risk factors is important both for a first cardiometabolic disease and cardiometabolic multimorbidity. This is not the case when the role of risk factors was examined in the risk of multimorbidity in those with 1 cardiometabolic disease, where clinical factors were not associated with multimorbidity but both behavioural and socioeconomic risk scales predicted progression to multimorbidity, highlighting the need to understand the modifiers of disease progression for effective prevention. Socioeconomic factors have long been known to be major determinants of health [21], and continue to be seen to be important compared to traditional risk factors [32]. Our results show them to be important predictors of multimorbidity in persons with a first cardiometabolic condition even when the effects of clinical and behavioural factors have been taken into account in the analysis.
The third finding highlights the key role of adverse midlife behavioural factors in risk of mortality, in those without or with 1 or 2 or more cardiometabolic diseases. In those with cardiometabolic multimorbidity, adverse behavioural factors were associated with as high as a 3.5-fold increased risk of death. Among the individual behavioural risk factors, our results highlight the role of smoking in all 5 transitions from a healthy state to mortality. Previous research has examined the risk of mortality in those with multimorbidity compared to disease-free individuals; a recent paper found each of 3 cardiometabolic conditions to be associated with a similar increased risk of mortality, and a combination of these diseases was associated with a multiplicative mortality risk [4]. The multimorbidity–mortality association depends on the specific chronic conditions used to characterise multimorbidity, whether they were self-reported, and the duration of follow-up [11]. It is worth noting that few studies have examined factors that modify the association of multimorbidity with mortality. There is some research on interventions, mainly on the organisation of care delivery in multimorbid patients, but the findings are inconclusive [12]. Our study is the first to our knowledge to examine the relative importance of clinical, socioeconomic, and behavioural factors in modifying disease trajectories; these findings highlight the major role of behavioural factors. Previous findings have highlighted the role of behavioural factors in mortality [33,34]; our findings show them to also be critically important for secondary prevention.
The ageing of populations and reduced case fatality of major chronic conditions has led to rapid increases in the prevalence of multimorbidity [3,10,11,30,31]; Scottish data on 1.7 million adults registered with primary care providers show the prevalence of multimorbidity to increase from 30% in those aged 45–64 to 65% in those aged 65–84 years [8]. However, the definition of multimorbidity varies across studies. A simple count of all chronic conditions yields prevalence rates of between 17% and 98%, depending on the conditions included in the list [35]. A recent study used up to 40 conditions to define multimorbidity, and reported 42% of persons to have 1 disease and 23% to have 2 or more diseases [8]. In our data, 30% had 1 cardiometabolic disease, and 6% had cardiometabolic multimorbidity. Our use of a narrow set of conditions that are leading causes of death or burden of disease allows the identification of common etiopathogenic and prognostic factors. Better understanding of these patterns may lead to improvements in preventive actions to reduce prevalence and may also give rise to new, more comprehensive approaches to the management of multimorbidity.
Our findings need to be considered in light of the study strengths and limitations. The strengths of our study derive from the large sample size, the long follow-up to allow analyses on clinically diagnosed incident diseases, and the availability of complete data on health outcomes. Although a gold-standard definition of multimorbidity remains elusive, there is consensus on use of clinically assessed rather than self-reported conditions [36]. A further strength is our analytic strategy. To illustrate its value, we also report results of conventional survival analyses (Table 2), which show clinical parameters to be important predictors of cardiometabolic multimorbidity. However, they are less important in shaping temporal disease progression, as clinical parameters were not associated with progression to multimorbidity in those with first cardiometabolic disease or mortality in those with cardiometabolic multimorbidity. Thus, the large body of research on risk and prognostic factors on individual disease outcomes may not be transferable to multimorbidity. We chose to study the role of risk factors at age 50 as risk factors assessed at older ages, in particular health-related behaviours, are likely to be prone to reverse causation biases, and, for clinical risk factors, there is evidence of significant tracking effects, defined as the longitudinal stability of the predictability of risk factors over time [37].
The primary limitation of our study is uncertain generalisability of findings as the results from an occupational cohort from the UK such as the Whitehall II study are likely to apply only to high-income countries with universal healthcare. A further limitation is that study participants in occupational cohorts tend to be healthier than individuals in the general population; however, this is an unlikely source of bias in risk factor–disease associations as we have shown estimates from our study to be similar to those reported in general-population-based studies [38]. As the Whitehall II study was designed to include a wide socioeconomic spectrum, with a 10-fold salary difference among the participants, the findings on socioeconomic factors are likely to be generalisable [32]. Temporal changes in risk factor distributions over the course of the study are unlikely to affect generalisability [39] as we estimated risk factor–outcome associations rather than composite measures such as population attributable fractions that also incorporate information on prevalence of risk factors. All risk factors were assessed at age 50; changes in risk factor levels due to treatment or lifestyle modification were not examined in our study. As the data come from an observational study, the findings may be affected by unobserved confounders. Finally, we chose to model 5 transitions rather than all possible transitions between individual diseases and outcomes and between pairs of diseases in order to simplify the analysis and interpretation of results. Transition A (healthy to first cardiometabolic disease) is comparable to analysis of incident cardiometabolic disease using Cox regression; similar results from both approaches suggest that our estimates of the transitions examined are robust and fit the data well.
In conclusion, multimorbidity is increasingly a challenge for patients, healthcare providers, and the healthcare systems globally, but medical research and healthcare delivery continue to focus on individual diseases. Our analysis of the natural history of cardiometabolic multimorbidity shows clinical parameters to be key determinants of incidence of a first cardiometabolic disease but socioeconomic and behavioural factors to determine progression to multimorbidity and behavioural factors to be important in shaping risk of mortality. These results highlight the need for a comprehensive approach to the primary and secondary prevention of cardiometabolic diseases.
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