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Cohort profile: the creation of the SAIL MELD-B e-cohort (SMC) and SAIL MELD-B children and young adult e-cohort (SMYC) to investigate the lived experience of the ‘burdensomeness’ of multimorbidity

Cohort profile: the creation of the SAIL MELD-B e-cohort (SMC) and SAIL MELD-B children and young adult e-cohort (SMYC) to investigate the lived experience of the ‘burdensomeness’ of multimorbidity
Cohort profile: the creation of the SAIL MELD-B e-cohort (SMC) and SAIL MELD-B children and young adult e-cohort (SMYC) to investigate the lived experience of the ‘burdensomeness’ of multimorbidity
Purpose: we have established the SAIL MELD-B electronic cohort (e-cohort SMC) and the SAIL MELD-B children and Young adults e-cohort (SMYC) as a part of the Multidisciplinary Ecosystem to study Lifecourse Determinants and Prevention of Early-onset Burdensome Multimorbidity (MELD-B) project. Each cohort has been created to investigate and develop a deeper understanding of the lived experience of the ‘burdensomeness’ of multimorbidity by identifying new clusters of burdensomeness concepts, exploring early life risk factors of multimorbidity and modelling hypothetical prevention scenarios.

Participants: the SMC and SMYC are longitudinal e-cohorts created from routinely collected individual-level population-scale anonymised data sources available within the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank. They include individuals with available records from linked health and demographic data sources in SAIL at any time between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2022. The SMYC e-cohort is a subset of the SMC, including only individuals born on or after the cohort start date.

Findings to date: the SMC and SMYC cohorts include 5 180 602 (50.3% female and 49.7% male) and 896 155 (48.7% female and 51.3% male) individuals, respectively. Considering both primary and secondary care health data, the five most common long-term conditions for individuals in SMC are ‘Depression’, affecting 21.6% of the cohort, ‘Anxiety’ (21.1%), ‘Asthma’ (17.5%), ‘Hypertension’ (16.2%) and ‘Atopic Eczema’ (14.1%) and the five most common conditions for individuals in SMYC are ‘Atopic Eczema’ (21.2%), ‘Asthma’ (11.6%), ‘Anxiety’ (6.0%), ‘Deafness’ (4.6%) and ‘Depression’ (4.3%).

Future plans: the SMC and SMYC e-cohorts have been developed using a reproducible, maintainable concept curation pipeline, which allows for the cohorts to be updated dynamically over time and manages for the request and processing of further approved long-term conditions and burdensomeness concepts extraction. Best practices from the MELD-B project can be utilised across other projects, accessing similar data with population-scale data sources and trusted research environments.
2044-6055
Chiovoloni, Roberta
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Dylag, Jakub J.
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Alwan, Nisreen A.
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Berrington, Ann
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Boniface, Michael
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Fair, Nic
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Holland, Emilia
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Hoyle, Rebecca
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Shiranirad, Mozhdeh
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Stannard, Sebastian
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Zlatev, Zlatko
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Owen, Rhiannon K.
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Fraser, Simon
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Akbari, Ashley
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Chiovoloni, Roberta
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Dylag, Jakub J.
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Alwan, Nisreen A.
0d37b320-f325-4ed3-ba51-0fe2866d5382
Berrington, Ann
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Boniface, Michael
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Fair, Nic
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Holland, Emilia
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Hoyle, Rebecca
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Shiranirad, Mozhdeh
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Stannard, Sebastian
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Zlatev, Zlatko
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Owen, Rhiannon K.
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Fraser, Simon
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Akbari, Ashley
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Chiovoloni, Roberta, Dylag, Jakub J., Alwan, Nisreen A., Berrington, Ann, Boniface, Michael, Fair, Nic, Holland, Emilia, Hoyle, Rebecca, Shiranirad, Mozhdeh, Stannard, Sebastian, Zlatev, Zlatko, Owen, Rhiannon K., Fraser, Simon and Akbari, Ashley (2025) Cohort profile: the creation of the SAIL MELD-B e-cohort (SMC) and SAIL MELD-B children and young adult e-cohort (SMYC) to investigate the lived experience of the ‘burdensomeness’ of multimorbidity. BMJ Open, 15, [e087946]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2024-087946).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: we have established the SAIL MELD-B electronic cohort (e-cohort SMC) and the SAIL MELD-B children and Young adults e-cohort (SMYC) as a part of the Multidisciplinary Ecosystem to study Lifecourse Determinants and Prevention of Early-onset Burdensome Multimorbidity (MELD-B) project. Each cohort has been created to investigate and develop a deeper understanding of the lived experience of the ‘burdensomeness’ of multimorbidity by identifying new clusters of burdensomeness concepts, exploring early life risk factors of multimorbidity and modelling hypothetical prevention scenarios.

Participants: the SMC and SMYC are longitudinal e-cohorts created from routinely collected individual-level population-scale anonymised data sources available within the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank. They include individuals with available records from linked health and demographic data sources in SAIL at any time between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2022. The SMYC e-cohort is a subset of the SMC, including only individuals born on or after the cohort start date.

Findings to date: the SMC and SMYC cohorts include 5 180 602 (50.3% female and 49.7% male) and 896 155 (48.7% female and 51.3% male) individuals, respectively. Considering both primary and secondary care health data, the five most common long-term conditions for individuals in SMC are ‘Depression’, affecting 21.6% of the cohort, ‘Anxiety’ (21.1%), ‘Asthma’ (17.5%), ‘Hypertension’ (16.2%) and ‘Atopic Eczema’ (14.1%) and the five most common conditions for individuals in SMYC are ‘Atopic Eczema’ (21.2%), ‘Asthma’ (11.6%), ‘Anxiety’ (6.0%), ‘Deafness’ (4.6%) and ‘Depression’ (4.3%).

Future plans: the SMC and SMYC e-cohorts have been developed using a reproducible, maintainable concept curation pipeline, which allows for the cohorts to be updated dynamically over time and manages for the request and processing of further approved long-term conditions and burdensomeness concepts extraction. Best practices from the MELD-B project can be utilised across other projects, accessing similar data with population-scale data sources and trusted research environments.

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Accepted/In Press date: 22 November 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 January 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496944
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496944
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: a6408541-61fe-4423-99ae-2f8b81d63015
ORCID for Jakub J. Dylag: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6263-7339
ORCID for Nisreen A. Alwan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4134-8463
ORCID for Ann Berrington: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1683-6668
ORCID for Michael Boniface: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9281-6095
ORCID for Nic Fair: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1566-4689
ORCID for Emilia Holland: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5722-3836
ORCID for Rebecca Hoyle: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1645-1071
ORCID for Mozhdeh Shiranirad: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4346-3059
ORCID for Sebastian Stannard: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6139-1020
ORCID for Simon Fraser: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4172-4406

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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 15:06
Last modified: 10 Jan 2025 03:18

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Contributors

Author: Roberta Chiovoloni
Author: Jakub J. Dylag ORCID iD
Author: Ann Berrington ORCID iD
Author: Nic Fair ORCID iD
Author: Emilia Holland ORCID iD
Author: Rebecca Hoyle ORCID iD
Author: Mozhdeh Shiranirad ORCID iD
Author: Sebastian Stannard ORCID iD
Author: Zlatko Zlatev
Author: Rhiannon K. Owen
Author: Simon Fraser ORCID iD
Author: Ashley Akbari

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