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Cluster separation outperforms other metrics in validating multimorbidity patterns: statistical simulation study.

Thamer Ba Dhafari1, Alexander Pate1, Glen P Martin1

  • 1Division of Informatics, Imaging & Data Sciences, School of Health Sciences, The University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL UK.

Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
|March 9, 2026
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Cluster separation is the most reliable method for validating multimorbidity clusters. While clustering stability has limitations, assessing health outcome associations does not validate cluster quality.

Keywords:
Analytical methodCluster analysisLatent class analysisMultimorbiditySimulation studyValidation

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Area of Science:

  • Health Services Research
  • Biostatistics
  • Computational Biology

Background:

  • Multimorbidity, the co-occurrence of multiple chronic conditions, presents a significant healthcare challenge.
  • Identifying distinct multimorbidity clusters aids in targeted interventions and optimized care.
  • Validating these clusters from real-world data is difficult due to the absence of a known ground truth.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To statistically evaluate three common validation approaches for multimorbidity clusters: cluster separation, clustering stability, and strength of association with health outcomes.
  • To compare the performance of these validation methods against a known ground truth in simulated datasets.
  • To determine the most reliable method for assessing the quality of derived multimorbidity clusters.

Main Methods:

  • Generated 25 simulated datasets with predefined multimorbidity clusters, varying disease prevalence, sample size, and noise.
  • Applied latent class analysis to derive clusters from simulated data.
  • Compared derived clusters to predefined ground truth clusters using the Adjusted Rand Index (ARI) as the gold standard.

Main Results:

  • Cluster separation, measured by the Calinski-Harabasz Index, demonstrated the strongest agreement with the gold standard (median correlation: 0.641).
  • Clustering stability, assessed via resampling, showed variable performance (median correlation: 0.421).
  • Strength of association with health outcomes (Nagelkerke's R² ) exhibited poor agreement with the gold standard (median correlation: -0.424).

Conclusions:

  • Cluster separation emerges as the most dependable method for validating multimorbidity clusters.
  • Clustering stability can be a useful validation tool but has inherent limitations.
  • Assessing the strength of association with health outcomes, while clinically relevant, does not reliably validate cluster quality.