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Multimorbidity in dementia: Current perspectives and future challenges

Stirland, Lucy, Choate, Radmila, Zanwar, Preeti Pushpalata, Zhang, Panpan, Watermeyer, Tamlyn, Balletta, Martina, Torso, Mario, Tamburin, Stefano, Saeed, Usman, Ridgeway, Gerard, Moukaled, Valleta, Lusk, Jay, Loi, Samantha, Littlejohns, Thomas, Kuźma, Elżbieta, James, Sarah‐Naomi, Grande, Giulia, Foote, Isabelle F, Cousins, Katheryn, Butler, Joe, AbuHamdia, Abrar, Avelino‐Silva, Thiago J and Suryadevara, Vidyani (2025) Multimorbidity in dementia: Current perspectives and future challenges. Alzheimer's & Dementia, 21 (8). ISSN 1552-5260

Item Type: Article

Abstract

Multimorbidity—the co‐occurrence of two or more chronic health conditions—affects > 86% of people with dementia. It is associated with cognitive and functional decline, reduced health‐related quality of life, increased health‐care use, and higher mortality. The relationship between multimorbidity and dementia is potentially bidirectional; conditions such as hypertension and diabetes increase the risk of developing dementia, and cognitive impairment can complicate their management. This complexity presents challenges in health care and research, affecting treatment decisions and often leading to the exclusion of these individuals from clinical trials. Understanding multimorbidity through long‐term prospective studies is crucial to clarify its relationship with dementia. Investigating specific disease combinations, environmental and genetic factors, and their impacts on cognitive health will guide the development of effective prediction models and inclusive intervention strategies for diverse global populations across the life course.

Highlights
Multimorbidity affects > 86% of individuals with dementia, worsening outcomes.

The relationship between multimorbidity and dementia is potentially bidirectional.

Chronic conditions hinder dementia management and clinical trial inclusion.

Life‐course multimorbidity research is key to dementia risk reduction strategies.

Prospective studies are needed to improve prediction models and interventions.

Keywords: all‐cause dementia, comorbidity, multimorbidity, multiple long‐term conditions

Full text not available from this repository.

More Information

Depositing User: Joe Butler

Identifiers

Item ID: 19307
Identification Number: https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.70546
ISSN: 1552-5260
URI: http://sure.sunderland.ac.uk/id/eprint/19307
Official URL: https://alz-journals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/1...

Users with ORCIDS

ORCID for Joe Butler: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8160-1200

Catalogue record

Date Deposited: 14 Aug 2025 08:43
Last Modified: 14 Aug 2025 12:07

Contributors

Author: Joe Butler ORCID iD
Author: Lucy Stirland
Author: Radmila Choate
Author: Preeti Pushpalata Zanwar
Author: Panpan Zhang
Author: Tamlyn Watermeyer
Author: Martina Balletta
Author: Mario Torso
Author: Stefano Tamburin
Author: Usman Saeed
Author: Gerard Ridgeway
Author: Valleta Moukaled
Author: Jay Lusk
Author: Samantha Loi
Author: Thomas Littlejohns
Author: Elżbieta Kuźma
Author: Sarah‐Naomi James
Author: Giulia Grande
Author: Isabelle F Foote
Author: Katheryn Cousins
Author: Abrar AbuHamdia
Author: Thiago J Avelino‐Silva
Author: Vidyani Suryadevara

University Divisions

Faculty of Health Sciences and Wellbeing

Subjects

Sciences > Health Sciences
Psychology > Psychology

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