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Abstract

To compare the ability of commonly used measures of medical comorbidity (ambulatory care groups [ACGs], Charlson comorbidity index, chronic disease score, number of prescribed medications, and number of chronic diseases) to predict mortality and health care costs over 1 year.

A prospective cohort study of community-dwelling older adults (n =3,496) attending a large primary care practice.

For predicting health care charges, the number of medications had the highest predictive validity (R2 =13.6%) after adjusting for demographics. ACGs (R2 =16.4%) and the number of medications (15.0%) had the highest predictive validity for predicting ambulatory visits. ACGs and the Charlson comorbidity index (area under the receiver operator characteristic [ROC] curve=0.695-0.767) performed better than medication-based measures (area under the ROC curve=0.662-0.679) for predicting mortality. There is relatively little difference, however, in the predictive validity across these scales.

In an outpatient setting, a simple count of medications may be the most efficient comorbidity measure for predicting utilization and health-care charges over the ensuing year. In contrast, diagnosis-based measures have greater predictive validity for 1-year mortality. Current comorbidity measures, however, have only poor to moderate predictive validity for costs or mortality over 1 year.

Details

Title
Common comorbidity scales were similar in their ability to predict health care costs and mortality
Author
Perkins, Anthony J.; Kroenke, Kurt; Unützer, Jürgen; Katon, Wayne; Williams, John W.; Hope, Carol; Callahan, Christopher M.
Pages
1040-8
Publication year
2004
Publication date
Oct 2004
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
08954356
e-ISSN
18785921
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1033171701
Copyright
© 2004 Elsevier Inc.