Authors

  1. Kumar, Raj G. MPH
  2. Juengst, Shannon B. PhD
  3. Wang, Zhensheng MPH
  4. Dams-O'Connor, Kristen PhD
  5. Dikmen, Sureyya S. PhD
  6. O'Neil-Pirozzi, Therese M. ScD, CCC-SLP
  7. Dahdah, Marie N. PhD
  8. Hammond, Flora M. MD
  9. Felix, Elizabeth R. PhD
  10. Arenth, Patricia M. PhD
  11. Wagner, Amy K. MD

Abstract

Objectives: Aging individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI) experience multiple comorbidities that can affect recovery from injury. The objective of this study was to describe the most commonly co-occurring comorbid conditions among adults 50 years and older with TBI.

 

Setting: Level I Trauma centers.

 

Participants: Adults 50 years and older with moderate/severe TBI enrolled in the TBI-Model Systems (TBI-MS) from 2007 to 2014 (n = 2134).

 

Design: A TBI-MS prospective cohort study.

 

Main Measures: International Classification of Disease-9th Revision codes collapsed into 45 comorbidity categories. Comorbidity prevalence estimates and trend analyses were conducted by age strata (50-54, 55-64, 65-74, 75-84, >=85 years). A dimension reduction method, Treelet Transform, classified clusters of comorbidities that tended to co-occur.

 

Results: The 3 most commonly occurring comorbid categories were hypertensive disease (52.6/100 persons), other diseases of the respiratory system (51.8/100 persons), and fluid component imbalances (43.7/100 persons). Treelet Transform classified 3 clusters of comorbid codes, broadly classified as (1) acute medical diseases/infections, (2) chronic conditions, and (3) substance abuse disorders.

 

Conclusion: This study provides valuable insight into comorbid conditions that co-occur among adults 50 years and older with TBI and provides a foundation for future studies to explore how specific comorbidities affect TBI recovery.