London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Lancet. 2012 Jun 9;379(9832):2162-72. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60820-4.
Preterm birth is the second largest direct cause of child deaths in children younger than 5 years. Yet, data regarding preterm birth (<37 completed weeks of gestation) are not routinely collected by UN agencies, and no systematic country estimates nor time trend analyses have been done. We report worldwide, regional, and national estimates of preterm birth rates for 184 countries in 2010 with time trends for selected countries, and provide a quantitative assessment of the uncertainty surrounding these estimates.
We assessed various data sources according to prespecified inclusion criteria. National Registries (563 datapoints, 51 countries), Reproductive Health Surveys (13 datapoints, eight countries), and studies identified through systematic searches and unpublished data (162 datapoints, 40 countries) were included. 55 countries submitted additional data during WHO's country consultation process. For 13 countries with adequate quality and quantity of data, we estimated preterm birth rates using country-level loess regression for 2010. For 171 countries, two regional multilevel statistical models were developed to estimate preterm birth rates for 2010. We estimated time trends from 1990 to 2010 for 65 countries with reliable time trend data and more than 10,000 livebirths per year. We calculated uncertainty ranges for all countries.
In 2010, an estimated 14·9 million babies (uncertainty range 12·3-18·1 million) were born preterm, 11·1% of all livebirths worldwide, ranging from about 5% in several European countries to 18% in some African countries. More than 60% of preterm babies were born in south Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, where 52% of the global livebirths occur. Preterm birth also affects rich countries, for example, USA has high rates and is one of the ten countries with the highest numbers of preterm births. Of the 65 countries with estimated time trends, only three (Croatia, Ecuador, and Estonia), had reduced preterm birth rates 1990-2010.
The burden of preterm birth is substantial and is increasing in those regions with reliable data. Improved recording of all pregnancy outcomes and standard application of preterm definitions is important. We recommend the addition of a data-quality indicator of the per cent of all live preterm births that are under 28 weeks' gestation. Distinguishing preterm births that are spontaneous from those that are provider-initiated is important to monitor trends associated with increased caesarean sections. Rapid scale up of basic interventions could accelerate progress towards Millennium Development Goal 4 for child survival and beyond.
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation through grants to Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group (CHERG) and Save the Children's Saving Newborn Lives programme; March of Dimes; the Partnership for Maternal Newborn and Childe Health; and WHO, Department of Reproductive Health and Research.
早产是导致 5 岁以下儿童死亡的第二大直接原因。然而,联合国机构并未定期收集有关早产(<37 周妊娠)的数据,也没有进行系统的国家估计或时间趋势分析。我们报告了 2010 年 184 个国家的早产率的全球、区域和国家估计值,并对这些估计值的不确定性进行了定量评估。
我们根据预先确定的纳入标准评估了各种数据源。国家登记处(51 个国家的 563 个数据点)、生殖健康调查(8 个国家的 13 个数据点)和通过系统搜索和未发表数据确定的研究(40 个国家的 162 个数据点)被纳入。55 个国家在世界卫生组织的国家协商过程中提交了额外的数据。对于 13 个数据质量和数量足够的国家,我们使用国家层面的局部平滑回归来估计 2010 年的早产率。对于 171 个国家,我们开发了两个区域多水平统计模型来估计 2010 年的早产率。我们对 65 个有可靠时间趋势数据和每年超过 10000 例活产的国家进行了 1990 年至 2010 年的时间趋势估计。我们为所有国家计算了不确定性范围。
2010 年,估计有 1490 万婴儿(不确定范围为 1230 万至 1810 万)早产,占全球所有活产儿的 11.1%,范围从几个欧洲国家的约 5%到一些非洲国家的 18%。超过 60%的早产儿出生在南亚和撒哈拉以南非洲,这两个地区占全球活产儿的 52%。早产也影响到富裕国家,例如,美国的早产率很高,是早产儿数量最多的十个国家之一。在有估计时间趋势的 65 个国家中,只有三个(克罗地亚、厄瓜多尔和爱沙尼亚)在 1990 年至 2010 年期间降低了早产率。
早产的负担很大,在那些有可靠数据的地区还在增加。改进所有妊娠结局的记录和早产定义的标准应用非常重要。我们建议增加一个数据质量指标,即所有活产早产儿中不足 28 周的比例。区分自发性早产和由提供者引发的早产对于监测与剖宫产增加相关的趋势很重要。快速扩大基本干预措施可以加速实现千年发展目标 4 中有关儿童生存的目标,并超越该目标。
比尔和梅林达盖茨基金会通过向儿童健康流行病学参考小组(CHERG)和拯救儿童新生命计划提供赠款、March of Dimes、母婴儿童健康伙伴关系以及世界卫生组织生殖健康和研究部提供资金。