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Reasons why multimorbidity increases the risk of participation restriction in older adults with lower extremity osteoarthritis: a prospective cohort study in primary care

Reasons why multimorbidity increases the risk of participation restriction in older adults with lower extremity osteoarthritis: a prospective cohort study in primary care
Reasons why multimorbidity increases the risk of participation restriction in older adults with lower extremity osteoarthritis: a prospective cohort study in primary care

Objective: to determine why multimorbidity causes participation restriction in adults ages ≥50 years who consult primary care with lower extremity osteoarthritis (OA).


Methods: this was a population-based prospective cohort study of 1,053 consulters for lower extremity OA who were free of participation restriction at baseline. Path analysis was used to test proposed mechanisms by examining for mediation of the association between multimorbidity at baseline, defined by self-report and consultation data separately, and incident participation restriction at 3 years by lower extremity pain severity, obesity, locomotor disability, and depression.


Results: multimorbidity was associated with incident participation restriction (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 2.83, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 2.03–3.94 for multimorbidity [self-report]; OR 1.59, 95% CI 1.15–2.21 for multimorbidity [consultation data]). The extent of mediation of the association of baseline multimorbidity, defined by self-report, and incident participation restriction was greater for severe lower extremity pain than obesity (standardized beta coefficients for indirect effect 0.032 [SE 0.015] and 0.020 [SE 0.019], respectively). The addition of depression and locomotor disability increased the amount of mediation (0.115 [SE 0.028]) and reduced the proportion explained by severe lower extremity pain (0.014 [SE 0.015]) and obesity (0.006 [SE 0.010]). Locomotor disability was the strongest mediator.


Conclusion: the additional impact on participation in social and domestic life that multimorbidity places on individuals with lower extremity OA appears to be mediated through further restriction of locomotor disability, as well as through depression. The results suggest that the effect of multimorbidity on the daily lives of people with lower extremity OA will be ameliorated by active management of depression and locomotor disability.

2151-464X
910-919
Wilkie, Ross
d5eac53d-8aff-447b-be07-31baa14ffc46
Blagojevic-Bucknall, Milisa
984df3e0-53f0-4456-ae53-3396ebb859fc
Jordan, Kelvin P.
f528b5c7-959d-4a46-b20a-9a765586a787
Lacey, Rosie
2702e742-35da-4a89-bb50-09b6c7d9244b
McBeth, John
98012716-66ba-480b-9e43-ac53b51dce61
Wilkie, Ross
d5eac53d-8aff-447b-be07-31baa14ffc46
Blagojevic-Bucknall, Milisa
984df3e0-53f0-4456-ae53-3396ebb859fc
Jordan, Kelvin P.
f528b5c7-959d-4a46-b20a-9a765586a787
Lacey, Rosie
2702e742-35da-4a89-bb50-09b6c7d9244b
McBeth, John
98012716-66ba-480b-9e43-ac53b51dce61

Wilkie, Ross, Blagojevic-Bucknall, Milisa, Jordan, Kelvin P., Lacey, Rosie and McBeth, John (2013) Reasons why multimorbidity increases the risk of participation restriction in older adults with lower extremity osteoarthritis: a prospective cohort study in primary care. Arthritis Care and Research, 65 (6), 910-919. (doi:10.1002/acr.21918).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to determine why multimorbidity causes participation restriction in adults ages ≥50 years who consult primary care with lower extremity osteoarthritis (OA).


Methods: this was a population-based prospective cohort study of 1,053 consulters for lower extremity OA who were free of participation restriction at baseline. Path analysis was used to test proposed mechanisms by examining for mediation of the association between multimorbidity at baseline, defined by self-report and consultation data separately, and incident participation restriction at 3 years by lower extremity pain severity, obesity, locomotor disability, and depression.


Results: multimorbidity was associated with incident participation restriction (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 2.83, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 2.03–3.94 for multimorbidity [self-report]; OR 1.59, 95% CI 1.15–2.21 for multimorbidity [consultation data]). The extent of mediation of the association of baseline multimorbidity, defined by self-report, and incident participation restriction was greater for severe lower extremity pain than obesity (standardized beta coefficients for indirect effect 0.032 [SE 0.015] and 0.020 [SE 0.019], respectively). The addition of depression and locomotor disability increased the amount of mediation (0.115 [SE 0.028]) and reduced the proportion explained by severe lower extremity pain (0.014 [SE 0.015]) and obesity (0.006 [SE 0.010]). Locomotor disability was the strongest mediator.


Conclusion: the additional impact on participation in social and domestic life that multimorbidity places on individuals with lower extremity OA appears to be mediated through further restriction of locomotor disability, as well as through depression. The results suggest that the effect of multimorbidity on the daily lives of people with lower extremity OA will be ameliorated by active management of depression and locomotor disability.

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Accepted/In Press date: 16 November 2012
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 December 2012
Published date: 30 May 2013

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Local EPrints ID: 491820
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491820
ISSN: 2151-464X
PURE UUID: a1a31422-079d-46ae-bb98-850ab6d7fb16
ORCID for John McBeth: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7047-2183

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Date deposited: 04 Jul 2024 16:52
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 02:17

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Contributors

Author: Ross Wilkie
Author: Milisa Blagojevic-Bucknall
Author: Kelvin P. Jordan
Author: Rosie Lacey
Author: John McBeth ORCID iD

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