Methodology, design, and analytic techniques to address measurement of comorbid disease
- PMID: 17389725
- PMCID: PMC2645650
- DOI: 10.1093/gerona/62.3.281
Methodology, design, and analytic techniques to address measurement of comorbid disease
Abstract
Background: Measurement of comorbidity affects all variable axes that are considered in health care research: confounding, modifying, independent, and dependent variable. Comorbidity measurement particularly affects research involving older adults because they bear the disproportionate share of the comorbidity burden.
Methods: We examine how well researchers can expect to segregate study participants into those who are healthier and those who are less healthy, given the variable axis for which they are measuring comorbidity, the comorbidity measure they select, and the analytic method they choose. We also examine the impact of poor measurement of comorbidity.
Results: Available comorbidity measures make use of medical records, self-report, physician assessments, and administrative databases. Analyses using these scales introduce uncertainties that can be framed as measurement error or misclassification problems, and can be addressed by extant analytic methods. Newer analytic methods make efficient use of multiple sources of comorbidity information.
Conclusions: Consideration of the comorbidity measure, its role in the analysis, and analogous measurement error problems will yield an analytic solution and an appreciation for the likely direction and magnitude of the biases introduced.
References
-
- McCormick WC, Kukull WA, van Belle G, Bowen JD, Teri L, Larson EB. Symptom patterns and comorbidity in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1994;42:517–521. - PubMed
-
- McCormick WC, Kukull WA, van Belle G, Bowen JD, Teri L, Larson EB. The effect of diagnosing Alzheimer’s disease on frequency of physician visits: a case-control study. J Gen Intern Med. 1995;10:187–193. - PubMed
-
- Charlson ME, Pompei P, Ales KL, MacKenzie CR. A new method of classifying prognostic comorbidity in longitudinal studies: development and validation. J Chronic Dis. 1987;40:373–383. - PubMed
-
- Linn BS, Linn MW, Gurel L. Cumulative illness rating scale. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1968;16:622–626. - PubMed
-
- Greenfield S, Blanco DM, Elashoff RM, Ganz PA. Patterns of care related to age of breast cancer patients. JAMA. 1987;257:2766–2770. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
