ABSTRACT Background Although guidelines focus predominantly on individual diseases, some dedicated guidelines and recommendations exist for common combinations of comorbidities. Using diabetes, coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke as an example, we aimed to assess the current status and quality of such guidelines. Methods We systematically searched literature databases, Google, guideline platforms, and websites of relevant organizations. We included guidelines published between 2020 and 2024 that addressed at least two of the following diseases: diabetes, CHD, and stroke; and included drug therapy interventions. We extracted the recommendations on drug therapy and sources of the supporting evidence, and assessed the quality of the guidelines using AGREE II and RIGHT with the help of a large language model based tool. Results We identified 82 guidelines: 64 focused on one disease with recommendations on comorbidities, and 18 specifically addressed a combination of diseases. China was the most frequent country of origin ( n = 50, 61.0%). The methodological and reporting quality of these guidelines was moderate on average. For most guidelines ( n = 54, 65.9%), the primary focus was on diabetes. We grouped the recommended drug therapies for patients with combinations of these diseases into four main categories: anti‐diabetic therapy, antihypertensive therapy, lipid‐lowering therapy, and anticoagulant therapy. Most recommendations were supported by RCTs, but only a third of the guidelines referred to studies done in multimorbid patients. Conclusion Most recommendations related to multimorbidity were found in guidelines focusing on a single target disease, and supporting evidence from multimorbid patients was rare. More primary evidence from multimorbid patients is needed.
Wang et al. (Sun,) studied this question.