Timecourse of Morbidity Onset Among Adults Living With Cerebral Palsy

2021
Introduction Despite the greater risk of an array of morbidities, little is known about when morbidities occur for adults with cerebral palsy. The objective of this study is to determine the timecourse of morbidity risk/development for adults with cerebral palsy and the effect by patient-level factors. Methods Cross-sectional data from 2016 were used from a random 20% sample from the fee-for-service Medicare database. Diagnosis codes identified adults aged ≥18 years with cerebral palsy and 16 clinically relevant morbidities. Qualitative and quantitative approaches identified the age where each morbidity became exceedingly prevalent. The effect of the timecourse by sex, race, and co-occurring intellectual disabilities and epilepsy was examined. Data were sequestered and analyzed in 2020. Results Among 16,818 adults with cerebral palsy, the prevalence of most morbidities was already high among those aged 18–30 years, and all morbidities increased with age except liver disease and anxiety. Hypertension and diabetes exhibited a positive linear trend with age. Of the morbidities that did not exhibit a linear trend, the qualitative and quantitative approaches were consistent considering that the cardiorespiratory diseases, osteoarthritis, renal disease, and dementia became exceedingly more prevalent at age >50 years, whereas the threshold was >60 years for depression, cancer, and metastatic cancer. There were interactions with sex, race, and co-occurring intellectual disabilities and epilepsy for some of the morbidities. Conclusions Morbidity prevalence is already elevated early in adulthood among individuals living with cerebral palsy, with an abrupt increase by age 50 years. Preventive efforts should be adopted early in the lifespan and not later than age 50 years for adults with cerebral palsy.
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