The contribution of general medical conditions to the non-fatal burden of mental disorders: register-based cohort study in Denmark

BJPsych Open. 2022 Oct 7;8(6):e180. doi: 10.1192/bjo.2022.583.

Abstract

Background: General medical conditions (GMCs) often co-occur with mental and substance use disorders (MSDs).

Aims: To explore the contribution of GMCs to the burden of disease in people with MSDs, and investigate how this varied by age.

Method: A population-based cohort of 6 988 507 persons living in Denmark during 2000-2015 followed for up to 16 years. Danish health registers were used to identify people with MSDs and GMCs. For each MSD, years lived with disability and health loss proportion (HeLP) were estimated for comorbid MSDs and GMCs, using a multiplicative model for disability weights.

Results: Those with any MSD lost the equivalent of 43% of healthy life (HeLP = 0.43, 95% CI 0.40-0.44) after including information on GMCs, which was an increase from 25% before including GMCs (HeLP = 0.25, 95% CI 0.23-0.27). Schizophrenia was associated with the highest burden of disease (HeLP = 0.77, 95% CI 0.68-0.85). However, within each disorder, the relative contribution of MSDs and GMCs varied. For example, in those diagnosed with schizophrenia, MSDs and GMCs accounted for 86% and 14% of the total health loss; in contrast, in those with anxiety disorders, the same proportions were 59% and 41%. In general, HeLP increased with age, and was mainly associated with increasing rates of pulmonary, musculoskeletal and circulatory diseases.

Conclusions: In those with mental disorders, the relative contribution of comorbid GMCs to the non-fatal burden of disease increases with age. GMCs contribute substantially to the non-fatal burden of disease in those with MSDs.

Keywords: Comorbidity; burden of disease; disability; epidemiology; health metrics.