All-cause and cause-specific mortality in respiratory symptom clusters: a population-based multicohort study

Abstract Background Respiratory symptoms are common in the general adult population. Increased burden of respiratory symptoms may increase the risk of mortality. We assessed the association between respiratory symptom clusters and mortality. Methods Participants were derived from two population-base...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Daniil Lisik, Helena Backman, Hannu Kankaanranta, Rani Basna, Linnea Hedman, Linda Ekerljung, Fredrik Nyberg, Anne Lindberg, Göran Wennergren, Eva Rönmark, Bright Nwaru, Lowie Vanfleteren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-04-01
Series:Respiratory Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12931-025-03224-7
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Abstract Background Respiratory symptoms are common in the general adult population. Increased burden of respiratory symptoms may increase the risk of mortality. We assessed the association between respiratory symptom clusters and mortality. Methods Participants were derived from two population-based Swedish adult cohorts (N = 63,060). Cluster analysis was performed with Locality Sensitive Hashing (LSH)-k-prototypes in subjects with ≥ 1 self-reported respiratory symptom. Linked mortality register data (up to 21 years of follow-up, > 600,000 person-years) were used. Associations between clusters and all-cause/cause-specific mortality were assessed using asymptomatic subjects as reference. Results Over 60% reported ≥ 1 respiratory symptom and ~ 30% reported ≥ 5 respiratory symptoms. Five clusters were identified, partly overlapping with established respiratory disease phenotypes but many individuals were undiagnosed: (1) "low-symptomatic" (30.3%); (2) "allergic nasal symptoms" (10.7%); (3) "allergic nasal symptoms, wheezing, and dyspnea attacks" (4.7%); (4) "wheezing and dyspnea attacks" (6.6%); (5) "recurrent productive cough and wheezing" (4.1%). All but Cluster 2 were associated with all-cause mortality, highest risk for Cluster 3 (hazard ratio 1.4, 95% confidence interval 1.13–1.73) and Cluster 5 (1.4, 1.22–1.61). Comparable associations were seen for cardiovascular mortality. For respiratory mortality, Cluster 4 (2.02, 1.18–3.46) and Cluster 5 (1.89, 1.1–3.25) were most strongly associated. Conclusions Respiratory symptoms are common in the general adult population, with identifiable clusters. These clusters have clinical relevancy as they are differentially associated with mortality and relatively weakly correlated with diagnosed respiratory disease.
ISSN:1465-993X