1. Bipolar disorder and medical comorbidities: A Portuguese population-based observational retrospective study (2008-2015).
- Author
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Henriques, Fábio, Ferreira, Ana Rita, Gonçalves-Pinho, Manuel, Freitas, Alberto, and Fernandes, Lia
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COMORBIDITY , *BIPOLAR disorder , *PERIPHERAL vascular diseases , *DIAGNOSIS , *CONGESTIVE heart failure , *MYOCARDIAL infarction , *CEREBROVASCULAR disease , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *HOSPITAL care - Abstract
Background: This study aimed to use the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) to assess the prevalence of medical comorbidities among hospitalization episodes with a primary Bipolar Disorder (BD) diagnosis, and to analyze its association with hospitalization outcomes.Methods: A population-based observational retrospective study was conducted using a Portuguese administrative database containing all mainland public hospitalizations. From 2008-2015, hospitalization episodes with a primary diagnosis of BD were analysed. Outcomes included: length of stay (LoS), in-hospital mortality and discharge destination.Results: Overall, 20807 hospitalization episodes were analysed. Mean±standard deviation age at admission was 47.9±14.3 years, and these episodes mostly refer to women's admissions (66.6%). Median (1st quartile; 3rd quartile) LoS was 16.0 (9.0; 25.0) days. A total of 2145 (10.3%) episodes had ≥1 CCI comorbidities registered, being diabetes the most prevalent. LoS was significantly higher for episodes with secondary diagnoses of congestive heart failure, cerebrovascular disease, dementia, diabetes, renal disease and malignancy (all p<0.05). Episodes with a registry of myocardial infarction, peripheral vascular disease, malignancy and renal disease diagnoses had higher in-hospital mortality.Limitations: Limitations include the use of data registered for administrative reasons rather than research purposes, and the analysis of hospitalization episodes, instead of patients.Conclusions: In this Portuguese nationwide study, greater comorbidity had a measurable impact on BD hospitalization outcomes. During the study period the prevalence of CCI comorbidities rose from 8.1% to 17.4%, which may reflect the overall increasing quality of hospital-coded data in Portugal throughout the years. The detection and timely management of medical comorbid conditions will likely prevent the high BD medical burden. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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