AI Article Synopsis

  • This study looked at how a program that checks for multiple health problems (called multimorbidity) affects patients with chronic inflammatory diseases.
  • Patients who participated in the program used more preventive medications, like vaccines and cholesterol-lowering drugs, compared to those who didn't.
  • Because of the program, there were fewer emergency hospital visits and serious infections for the patients who participated, showing that it was helpful for their health.

Article Abstract

Rational: Studies are needed to determine if multimorbidity screening and management reduce the rate of multimorbidity accumulation in patients with chronic inflammatory rheumatic diseases (IRD).

Objectives: This study evaluates the impact of systematic screening programme on patient care and hospitalisation rates.

Methods: Patients with IRD who participated in the screening programme (exposed patients) were identified within the French national health database and matched with controls. Two sets of analysis were performed: one with multivariate analysis and a second using a propensity score matching to ensure comparability between exposed patients and controls. The primary endpoint (PE) was a composite score assessing the dispensation of multimorbidity-preventing drugs, including vaccines, lipid-lowering agents, antiosteoporotic medications and antiplatelet drugs, during the year following the index date.

Results: The first analysis included 286 exposed patients and 858 controls, demonstrating a higher rate of meeting the PE in exposed patients (adjusted OR=1.6 (1.2-2.2), p<0.01). Propensity score matching resulted in 281 exposed patients and 281 controls. Exposed patients exhibited a significantly higher rate of meeting the PE compared with controls (54.8% vs 44.5%; OR=1.5; p=0.015), with increased utilisation of vaccines, cholesterol-lowering drugs and antiosteoporotic medications. Furthermore, emergency admission and hospitalisations for fracture, cardiovascular events or infection were significantly less frequent in the exposed group (7.1% vs 15.3%; OR=0.42, p<0.01), with a reduction in severe infections (0.7% vs 3.9%; p=0.03).

Conclusion: Systematic multimorbidity screening in patients with IRD boosted preventive medication use and reduced hospital admissions, justifying time and resource allocation for screening.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11448191PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/rmdopen-2024-004490DOI Listing

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