Treatment hope as study shows how different illnesses are linked

644     0
Researchers have used technology to examine links between illnesses (Image: Getty Images)
Researchers have used technology to examine links between illnesses (Image: Getty Images)

We have a problem. More and more people are living with several medical conditions, sometimes many.

But medical education and training, delivery, guidelines and even research, focus on one disease at a time. There’s a mismatch between what ­patients experience and what doctors are trained to do.

Researchers at University College London (UCL) are approaching this dilemma by identifying patterns of common diseases occurring together in the same people, using data from four million English patients.

As a result, the Academy of Medical Sciences and the UK’s Chief Medical Officer are now investigating which diseases co-occur in the same people and why.

From routine health records the team identified clusters of 308 common mental and physical ­conditions in men and women of different ages and different ethnicities.

Hospitals run out of oxygen and mortuaries full amid NHS chaos qhiqqxireitdprwHospitals run out of oxygen and mortuaries full amid NHS chaos
Treatment hope as study shows how different illnesses are linkedThe team identified clusters of 308 common mental and physical ­conditions (stock image) (Getty Images)

It found heart failure often occurs along with high blood pressure, angina, heart attack, atrial fibrillation, type 2 diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic kidney disease, and osteoarthritis (co-morbidities). Hypertension, on the other hand, was most strongly ­associated with obesity, type 2 diabetes and high blood fats in people aged 40 years and older.

Breast cancer was linked to different comorbidities in people from different ethnicities, asthma with different comorbidities between the sexes, and bipolar disorder with different ­comorbidities in younger people compared with older ones, so it is dependent on age.

Researchers say this clustering should help improve health in English patients with more than one illness.

UCL study co-author Professor Aroon Hingorani said: “Information from minority ethnic groups and younger people has often been missing from studies of multimorbidity, but by using diverse electronic health records, we present a more inclusive perspective. This is one area where the NHS ­electronic health records and data science can generate important insights.”

Professor Spiros Denaxas, also at UCL added: “Millions live with multiple diseases, yet our understanding of how and when these transpire is limited. This project is the first step towards understanding how these diseases co-occur and ­identifying how to best treat them.”

It should become possible to pick up diseases that cluster more commonly than expected by chance, and thus provide an entry point to investigate common risk factors and treatments.

The findings should also help patients better understand their illness, doctors plan management, health-care providers optimise service delivery, policymakers plan resource allocation, and researchers to develop new or use existing medicines to treat several diseases together. Good news.

Miriam Stoppard

Medicine, Health, Heart disease, University College London, NHS

Read more similar news:

01.01.2023, 20:11 • Politics
Mystic Mag's 2023 predictions include strikes, sleaze, self pity and separation
01.01.2023, 20:46 • Politics
NHS in crisis as 500 people die each week due 'killer' to emergency care delays
01.01.2023, 20:47 • Crime
500 deaths is criminal and you can't blame it on strikers - Voice of the Mirror
02.01.2023, 00:01 • Politics
Lack of face-to-face GP appointments 'turning patients into DIY doctors'
02.01.2023, 02:50 • UK News
Doctor filmed stealing patient's coat because 'it was cold outside' to keep job
01.01.2023, 21:57 • Lifestyle
A&E delays caused by flu crisis are killing 500 each week, top doctor warns
02.01.2023, 00:01 • Lifestyle
Sick people self diagnosing because they cannot see a GP, research shows
02.01.2023, 00:39 • Lifestyle
Hundreds of NHS patients had limbs amputated due to botched care
02.01.2023, 11:59 • Politics
NHS strikes could run for months as Tories plan fresh pay cuts for staff
02.01.2023, 13:08 • Crime
Human remains discovered in pond next to hospital as police launch investigation