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Evaluation of the impact of multimorbidity on difficult-to-treat asthma using a novel score (MiDAS): a multinational study of asthma cohorts

Evaluation of the impact of multimorbidity on difficult-to-treat asthma using a novel score (MiDAS): a multinational study of asthma cohorts
Evaluation of the impact of multimorbidity on difficult-to-treat asthma using a novel score (MiDAS): a multinational study of asthma cohorts
Background: multimorbidity (co-existence of 2 or more health conditions) is highly prevalent in difficult-to-treat asthma. However, it remains unclear as to how multimorbidity correlates with disease severity and adverse health outcomes in such patients, and which comorbidities are most important. We aimed to develop a patient-centred, clinically descriptive Multimorbidity in Difficult Asthma Score (MiDAS) to address that knowledge gap.

Methods: we analysed data from the UK-based Wessex Asthma Cohort of Difficult Asthma (WATCH) (n=500; 2015-2020) to develop MiDAS, which we then sought to test in cohorts from Australia (two cohorts: n=236, 2014-2017; n=140, 2014-2017), South-East Asia (n=151, 2017-2024), and the USA (n=100, 2021-2023). Initially, we created a modified Asthma Severity Scoring System (m-ASSESS) in WATCH. We then conducted univariate association analysis between the 13 commonest comorbidities and m-ASSESS in WATCH, followed by a branch-and-bound approach to select relevant comorbidities associated with m-ASSESS for inclusion in MiDAS. We next assessed MiDAS and its association with multiple clinical outcomes in the other cohorts.

Findings: our study cohorts demonstrated some ethnicity differences but exhibited broadly similar clinical and comorbidity characteristics. By selecting and combining seven common comorbidities [rhinitis, gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD), breathing pattern disorder (BPD), obesity, bronchiectasis, Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug-Exacerbated Respiratory Disease (NERD), and obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA)] we calculated a MiDAS model associated with m-ASSESS in WATCH. MiDAS was correlated with adverse quality-of-life measures and pro-inflammatory plasma cytokines in WATCH. MiDAS was investigated in the independent cohorts, where it correlated with worse asthma control, worse quality of life, anxiety, depression, and increased inflammation.

Interpretation: MiDAS shines a spotlight on the co-occurrence of multimorbidity with the worst outcomes in difficult-to-treat asthma. There can now be no doubt that an airway-centric approach is inadequate: holistic and multi-disciplinary care is imperative. This clinical score could help clinicians to identify patients most in need.


2213-2600
Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh
9c7b8105-2892-49f2-8775-54d4961e3e74
Freeman, Anna
b5f45a0d-f9e4-4a91-9af0-40efb6730787
Perunthadambil Kadalayil, Latha
e620b801-844a-45d9-acaf-e0a58acd7cf2
Ainsworth, Ben
b02d78c3-aa8b-462d-a534-31f1bf164f81
Lewis, Adam
71c83b66-d847-4aee-b716-b04d6de51450
et al.
Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh
9c7b8105-2892-49f2-8775-54d4961e3e74
Freeman, Anna
b5f45a0d-f9e4-4a91-9af0-40efb6730787
Perunthadambil Kadalayil, Latha
e620b801-844a-45d9-acaf-e0a58acd7cf2
Ainsworth, Ben
b02d78c3-aa8b-462d-a534-31f1bf164f81
Lewis, Adam
71c83b66-d847-4aee-b716-b04d6de51450

Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh, Freeman, Anna and Perunthadambil Kadalayil, Latha , et al. (2025) Evaluation of the impact of multimorbidity on difficult-to-treat asthma using a novel score (MiDAS): a multinational study of asthma cohorts. The Lancet Respiratory Medicine.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: multimorbidity (co-existence of 2 or more health conditions) is highly prevalent in difficult-to-treat asthma. However, it remains unclear as to how multimorbidity correlates with disease severity and adverse health outcomes in such patients, and which comorbidities are most important. We aimed to develop a patient-centred, clinically descriptive Multimorbidity in Difficult Asthma Score (MiDAS) to address that knowledge gap.

Methods: we analysed data from the UK-based Wessex Asthma Cohort of Difficult Asthma (WATCH) (n=500; 2015-2020) to develop MiDAS, which we then sought to test in cohorts from Australia (two cohorts: n=236, 2014-2017; n=140, 2014-2017), South-East Asia (n=151, 2017-2024), and the USA (n=100, 2021-2023). Initially, we created a modified Asthma Severity Scoring System (m-ASSESS) in WATCH. We then conducted univariate association analysis between the 13 commonest comorbidities and m-ASSESS in WATCH, followed by a branch-and-bound approach to select relevant comorbidities associated with m-ASSESS for inclusion in MiDAS. We next assessed MiDAS and its association with multiple clinical outcomes in the other cohorts.

Findings: our study cohorts demonstrated some ethnicity differences but exhibited broadly similar clinical and comorbidity characteristics. By selecting and combining seven common comorbidities [rhinitis, gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD), breathing pattern disorder (BPD), obesity, bronchiectasis, Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug-Exacerbated Respiratory Disease (NERD), and obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA)] we calculated a MiDAS model associated with m-ASSESS in WATCH. MiDAS was correlated with adverse quality-of-life measures and pro-inflammatory plasma cytokines in WATCH. MiDAS was investigated in the independent cohorts, where it correlated with worse asthma control, worse quality of life, anxiety, depression, and increased inflammation.

Interpretation: MiDAS shines a spotlight on the co-occurrence of multimorbidity with the worst outcomes in difficult-to-treat asthma. There can now be no doubt that an airway-centric approach is inadequate: holistic and multi-disciplinary care is imperative. This clinical score could help clinicians to identify patients most in need.


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MiDAS Paper_LRM Accepted 020525 - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 17 October 2025.
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Published date: 17 April 2025

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Local EPrints ID: 502592
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502592
ISSN: 2213-2600
PURE UUID: a699732c-6e80-4a64-abb3-4e6dad08da64
ORCID for Ramesh Kurukulaaratchy: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1588-2400
ORCID for Anna Freeman: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3495-2520
ORCID for Ben Ainsworth: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5098-1092
ORCID for Adam Lewis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0576-8823

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Date deposited: 01 Jul 2025 16:53
Last modified: 05 Jul 2025 02:17

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Contributors

Author: Anna Freeman ORCID iD
Author: Ben Ainsworth ORCID iD
Author: Adam Lewis ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.

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