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Multimorbidity trajectories in early adulthood and middle age: Findings from the CARDIA prospective cohort study.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Bowling, CB; Faldowski, RA; Sloane, R; Pieper, C; Brown, TH; Dooley, EE; Burrows, BT; Allen, NB; Gabriel, KP; Lewis, CE
Published in: J Multimorb Comorb
2024

BACKGROUND: Multimorbidity research has focused on the prevalence and consequences of multimorbidity in older populations. Less is known about the accumulation of chronic conditions earlier in the life course. METHODS: We identified patterns of longitudinal multimorbidity accumulation using 30 years of data from in-person exams, annual follow-ups, and adjudicated end-points among 4,945 participants of the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study. Chronic conditions included arthritis, asthma, atrial fibrillation, cancer, end stage renal disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, coronary heart disease, diabetes, heart failure, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, and stroke. Trajectory patterns were identified using latent class growth curve models. RESULTS: Mean age (SD) at baseline (1985-6) was 24.9 (3.6), 55% were female, and 51% were Black. The median follow-up was 30 years (interquartile range 25-30). We identified six trajectory classes characterized by when conditions began to accumulate and the rapidity of accumulation: (1) early-fifties, slow, (2) mid-forties, fast, (3) mid-thirties, fast, (4) late-twenties, slow, (5) mid-twenties, slow, and (6) mid-twenties, fast. Compared with participants in the early-fifties, slow trajectory class, participants in mid-twenties, fast were more likely to be female, Black, and currently smoking and had a higher baseline mean waist circumference (83.6 vs. 75.6 cm) and BMI (27.0 vs. 23.4 kg/m2) and lower baseline physical activity (414.1 vs. 442.4 exercise units). CONCLUSIONS: A life course approach that recognizes the heterogeneity in patterns of accumulation of chronic conditions from early adulthood into middle age could be helpful for identifying high risk subgroups and developing approaches to delay multimorbidity progression.

Duke Scholars

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Published In

J Multimorb Comorb

DOI

EISSN

2633-5565

Publication Date

2024

Volume

14

Start / End Page

26335565241242277

Location

England
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Bowling, C. B., Faldowski, R. A., Sloane, R., Pieper, C., Brown, T. H., Dooley, E. E., … Lewis, C. E. (2024). Multimorbidity trajectories in early adulthood and middle age: Findings from the CARDIA prospective cohort study. J Multimorb Comorb, 14, 26335565241242276. https://doi.org/10.1177/26335565241242277
Bowling, C Barrett, Richard A. Faldowski, Richard Sloane, Carl Pieper, Tyson H. Brown, Erin E. Dooley, Brett T. Burrows, Norrina B. Allen, Kelley Pettee Gabriel, and Cora E. Lewis. “Multimorbidity trajectories in early adulthood and middle age: Findings from the CARDIA prospective cohort study.J Multimorb Comorb 14 (2024): 26335565241242276. https://doi.org/10.1177/26335565241242277.
Bowling CB, Faldowski RA, Sloane R, Pieper C, Brown TH, Dooley EE, et al. Multimorbidity trajectories in early adulthood and middle age: Findings from the CARDIA prospective cohort study. J Multimorb Comorb. 2024;14:26335565241242276.
Bowling, C. Barrett, et al. “Multimorbidity trajectories in early adulthood and middle age: Findings from the CARDIA prospective cohort study.J Multimorb Comorb, vol. 14, 2024, p. 26335565241242276. Pubmed, doi:10.1177/26335565241242277.
Bowling CB, Faldowski RA, Sloane R, Pieper C, Brown TH, Dooley EE, Burrows BT, Allen NB, Gabriel KP, Lewis CE. Multimorbidity trajectories in early adulthood and middle age: Findings from the CARDIA prospective cohort study. J Multimorb Comorb. 2024;14:26335565241242276.

Published In

J Multimorb Comorb

DOI

EISSN

2633-5565

Publication Date

2024

Volume

14

Start / End Page

26335565241242277

Location

England