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1990年和2010年20个年龄组中235种死因的全球和区域死亡率:全球疾病负担研究2010的系统分析

Global and regional mortality from 235 causes of death for 20 age groups in 1990 and 2010: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010.

机构信息

Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, Seattle, WA, USA.

出版信息

Lancet. 2012 Dec 15;380(9859):2095-128. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)61728-0.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Reliable and timely information on the leading causes of death in populations, and how these are changing, is a crucial input into health policy debates. In the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2010 (GBD 2010), we aimed to estimate annual deaths for the world and 21 regions between 1980 and 2010 for 235 causes, with uncertainty intervals (UIs), separately by age and sex.

METHODS

We attempted to identify all available data on causes of death for 187 countries from 1980 to 2010 from vital registration, verbal autopsy, mortality surveillance, censuses, surveys, hospitals, police records, and mortuaries. We assessed data quality for completeness, diagnostic accuracy, missing data, stochastic variations, and probable causes of death. We applied six different modelling strategies to estimate cause-specific mortality trends depending on the strength of the data. For 133 causes and three special aggregates we used the Cause of Death Ensemble model (CODEm) approach, which uses four families of statistical models testing a large set of different models using different permutations of covariates. Model ensembles were developed from these component models. We assessed model performance with rigorous out-of-sample testing of prediction error and the validity of 95% UIs. For 13 causes with low observed numbers of deaths, we developed negative binomial models with plausible covariates. For 27 causes for which death is rare, we modelled the higher level cause in the cause hierarchy of the GBD 2010 and then allocated deaths across component causes proportionately, estimated from all available data in the database. For selected causes (African trypanosomiasis, congenital syphilis, whooping cough, measles, typhoid and parathyroid, leishmaniasis, acute hepatitis E, and HIV/AIDS), we used natural history models based on information on incidence, prevalence, and case-fatality. We separately estimated cause fractions by aetiology for diarrhoea, lower respiratory infections, and meningitis, as well as disaggregations by subcause for chronic kidney disease, maternal disorders, cirrhosis, and liver cancer. For deaths due to collective violence and natural disasters, we used mortality shock regressions. For every cause, we estimated 95% UIs that captured both parameter estimation uncertainty and uncertainty due to model specification where CODEm was used. We constrained cause-specific fractions within every age-sex group to sum to total mortality based on draws from the uncertainty distributions.

FINDINGS

In 2010, there were 52·8 million deaths globally. At the most aggregate level, communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional causes were 24·9% of deaths worldwide in 2010, down from 15·9 million (34·1%) of 46·5 million in 1990. This decrease was largely due to decreases in mortality from diarrhoeal disease (from 2·5 to 1·4 million), lower respiratory infections (from 3·4 to 2·8 million), neonatal disorders (from 3·1 to 2·2 million), measles (from 0·63 to 0·13 million), and tetanus (from 0·27 to 0·06 million). Deaths from HIV/AIDS increased from 0·30 million in 1990 to 1·5 million in 2010, reaching a peak of 1·7 million in 2006. Malaria mortality also rose by an estimated 19·9% since 1990 to 1·17 million deaths in 2010. Tuberculosis killed 1·2 million people in 2010. Deaths from non-communicable diseases rose by just under 8 million between 1990 and 2010, accounting for two of every three deaths (34·5 million) worldwide by 2010. 8 million people died from cancer in 2010, 38% more than two decades ago; of these, 1·5 million (19%) were from trachea, bronchus, and lung cancer. Ischaemic heart disease and stroke collectively killed 12·9 million people in 2010, or one in four deaths worldwide, compared with one in five in 1990; 1·3 million deaths were due to diabetes, twice as many as in 1990. The fraction of global deaths due to injuries (5·1 million deaths) was marginally higher in 2010 (9·6%) compared with two decades earlier (8·8%). This was driven by a 46% rise in deaths worldwide due to road traffic accidents (1·3 million in 2010) and a rise in deaths from falls. Ischaemic heart disease, stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), lower respiratory infections, lung cancer, and HIV/AIDS were the leading causes of death in 2010. Ischaemic heart disease, lower respiratory infections, stroke, diarrhoeal disease, malaria, and HIV/AIDS were the leading causes of years of life lost due to premature mortality (YLLs) in 2010, similar to what was estimated for 1990, except for HIV/AIDS and preterm birth complications. YLLs from lower respiratory infections and diarrhoea decreased by 45-54% since 1990; ischaemic heart disease and stroke YLLs increased by 17-28%. Regional variations in leading causes of death were substantial. Communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional causes still accounted for 76% of premature mortality in sub-Saharan Africa in 2010. Age standardised death rates from some key disorders rose (HIV/AIDS, Alzheimer's disease, diabetes mellitus, and chronic kidney disease in particular), but for most diseases, death rates fell in the past two decades; including major vascular diseases, COPD, most forms of cancer, liver cirrhosis, and maternal disorders. For other conditions, notably malaria, prostate cancer, and injuries, little change was noted.

INTERPRETATION

Population growth, increased average age of the world's population, and largely decreasing age-specific, sex-specific, and cause-specific death rates combine to drive a broad shift from communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional causes towards non-communicable diseases. Nevertheless, communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional causes remain the dominant causes of YLLs in sub-Saharan Africa. Overlaid on this general pattern of the epidemiological transition, marked regional variation exists in many causes, such as interpersonal violence, suicide, liver cancer, diabetes, cirrhosis, Chagas disease, African trypanosomiasis, melanoma, and others. Regional heterogeneity highlights the importance of sound epidemiological assessments of the causes of death on a regular basis.

FUNDING

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

摘要

背景

有关人群主要死因及其变化情况的可靠且及时的信息,是健康政策辩论的关键依据。在《2010年全球疾病、伤害和危险因素负担研究》(GBD 2010)中,我们旨在估算1980年至2010年间全球及21个地区235种死因的年度死亡人数,并给出不确定性区间(UI),按年龄和性别分别统计。

方法

我们试图从人口动态登记、死因推断、死亡率监测、人口普查、调查、医院、警方记录和停尸房等渠道,获取1980年至2010年间187个国家所有可得到的死因数据。我们评估了数据质量,包括完整性、诊断准确性、数据缺失情况、随机变异以及可能的死因。根据数据的可靠性应用六种不同的建模策略来估算特定死因的死亡率趋势。对于133种死因和三个特殊汇总类别,我们采用死因综合模型(CODEm)方法,该方法使用四类统计模型,通过协变量的不同排列组合来测试大量不同模型。从这些组件模型中开发模型集合。我们通过对预测误差进行严格的样本外测试以及95%不确定性区间的有效性来评估模型性能。对于死亡人数观测值较少的13种死因,我们开发了带有合理协变量的负二项模型。对于死亡罕见的27种死因,我们对GBD 2010死因层次结构中的更高级别死因进行建模,然后根据数据库中所有可用数据按比例在各组成死因中分配死亡人数。对于选定的死因(非洲锥虫病、先天性梅毒、百日咳、麻疹、伤寒和副伤寒、利什曼病、急性戊型肝炎以及艾滋病毒/艾滋病),我们基于发病率、患病率和病死率信息使用自然史模型。我们分别按病因估算腹泻、下呼吸道感染和脑膜炎的死因占比,以及按子病因对慢性肾病、孕产妇疾病、肝硬化和肝癌进行分类统计。对于集体暴力和自然灾害导致的死亡,我们使用死亡率冲击回归分析。对于每种死因,我们估算95%不确定性区间,该区间涵盖了参数估计的不确定性以及在使用CODEm时因模型设定产生的不确定性。我们根据不确定性分布的抽样结果,将每个年龄 - 性别组内的特定死因占比限制为总和等于总死亡率。

结果

2010年,全球有5280万人死亡。在最宏观层面,2010年传染病、孕产妇、新生儿和营养性疾病导致的死亡占全球死亡人数的24.9%,低于1990年4650万人死亡中的1590万人(34.1%)。这一减少主要归因于腹泻病死亡率下降(从250万降至140万)、下呼吸道感染死亡率下降(从340万降至280万)、新生儿疾病死亡率下降(从310万降至220万)、麻疹死亡率下降(从63万降至13万)以及破伤风死亡率下降(从27万降至6万)。艾滋病毒/艾滋病导致的死亡从1990年的30万增至2010年的150万,2006年达到峰值170万。自1990年以来,疟疾死亡率估计也上升了19.9%,2010年达117万人死亡。2010年结核病导致120万人死亡。1990年至2010年间,非传染性疾病导致的死亡人数增加了近800万,到2010年占全球每三例死亡中的两例(3450万)。2010年有800万人死于癌症,比二十多年前增加了38%;其中150万人(19%)死于气管、支气管和肺癌。201年缺血性心脏病和中风共导致1290万人死亡,占全球死亡人数的四分之一,而1990年为五分之一;130万人死于糖尿病,是1990年的两倍。2010年因伤害导致的全球死亡人数(510万)占比(9.6%)略高于二十年前(8.8%)。这主要是由于全球道路交通事故死亡人数增加了46%(2010年达130万)以及跌倒死亡人数上升。缺血性心脏病、中风、慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)、下呼吸道感染、肺癌和艾滋病毒/艾滋病是2010年的主要死因。缺血性心脏病、下呼吸道感染、中风、腹泻病、疟疾和艾滋病毒/艾滋病是2010年因过早死亡导致的生命年损失(YLLs)的主要原因,与1990年的估计情况相似,艾滋病毒/艾滋病和早产并发症除外。自1990年以来,下呼吸道感染和腹泻病导致的YLLs减少了45 - 54%;缺血性心脏病和中风导致的YLLs增加了17 - 28%。主要死因的地区差异很大。2010年,传染病、孕产妇、新生儿和营养性疾病仍占撒哈拉以南非洲过早死亡人数的76%。一些关键疾病的年龄标准化死亡率上升(特别是艾滋病毒/艾滋病、阿尔茨海默病、糖尿病和慢性肾病),但在过去二十年中,大多数疾病的死亡率下降了;包括主要血管疾病、COPD、大多数癌症形式、肝硬化和孕产妇疾病。对于其他疾病,特别是疟疾、前列腺癌和伤害,变化不大。

解读

人口增长、全球人口平均年龄增加以及各年龄组、性别和死因的死亡率总体下降,共同推动了从传染病、孕产妇、新生儿和营养性疾病向非传染性疾病的广泛转变。然而,传染病、孕产妇、新生儿和营养性疾病仍是撒哈拉以南非洲YLLs的主要原因。在这种总体的流行病学转变模式之上,许多死因存在明显的地区差异,如人际暴力、自杀、肝癌、糖尿病、肝硬化、恰加斯病、非洲锥虫病、黑色素瘤等。地区异质性凸显了定期对死因进行合理流行病学评估的重要性。

资助

比尔及梅琳达·盖茨基金会。

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