The Univeristy of Melbourne The Royal Melbourne Hopspital

A joint venture between The University of Melbourne and The Royal Melbourne Hospital

Publication

Excess mortality among people with communicable diseases over a 30-year period, Victoria, Australia: a whole of population cohort study


Authors:

  • Rowe, Stacey L.
  • Leder, Karin
  • Sundaresan, Lalitha
  • Wollersheim, Dennis
  • Lawrie, Jock
  • Stephens, Nicola
  • Cowie, Benjamin C.
  • Nolan, Terry M.
  • Cheng, Allen C.

Details:

The Lancet Regional Health - Western Pacific, Volume 38, 2023-09-30

Article Link: Click here

Background Understanding mortality burden associated with communicable diseases is key to informing resource allocation, disease prevention and control efforts, and evaluating public health interventions. We quantified excess mortality among people notified with communicable diseases in Victoria, Australia. Methods Cases of communicable disease notified in Victoria between 1 January 1991 and 31 December 2021 were linked to the death registry. Informational gain obtained through linkage and 30-day case fatality rates were calculated for each disease. Standardised mortality ratios (SMR) and 95% confidence intervals were calculated up to a year following illness onset. Findings There were 1,032,619 cases and 5985 (0.58%) died ≤30 days of illness onset. Following linkage, the 30-day case fatality rate increased more than 2-fold. Diseases with high 7-day SMR signifying excess mortality included invasive pneumococcal disease (167.7, 95% CI 153.4–182.7); listeriosis (166.2, 95% CI 121.2–218.3); invasive meningococcal disease (145.9, 95% CI 116.7–178.3); legionellosis (43.3, 95% CI 28.0–62.0); and COVID-19 (21.9, 95% CI 19.7–24.3). Most diseases exhibited a strong negative gradient, with high SMRs in the first 7-days of illness onset that reduced over time. Interpretation We demonstrated that the rate of death in Victoria's notifiable disease surveillance dataset is underestimated. Further, compared to a general population, there is evidence of elevated all-cause mortality among people notified with communicable diseases often up to one year following illness onset. Not all elevated risk is likely directly attributable to the communicable diseases of interest, rather, it may reflect underlying comorbidities or behaviours in these individuals. Regardless of attribution, infection with communicable diseases may represent a marker of mortality. Key to preventing deaths may be through timely and appropriate transition to primary and preventive healthcare following diagnosis. Funding No funding was provided for this study.