Lekoubou Alain, Echouffo-Tcheugui Justin B, Kengne Andre P
Department of Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
BMC Public Health. 2014 Jun 26;14:653. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-653.
Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries are experiencing rapid transitions with increased life expectancy. As a result the burden of age-related conditions such as neurodegenerative diseases might be increasing. We conducted a systematic review of published studies on common neurodegenerative diseases, and HIV-related neurocognitive impairment in SSA, in order to identify research gaps and inform prevention and control solutions.
We searched MEDLINE via PubMed, 'Banque de Données de Santé Publique' and the database of the 'Institut d'Epidemiologie Neurologique et de Neurologie Tropicale' from inception to February 2013 for published original studies from SSA on neurodegenerative diseases and HIV-related neurocognitive impairment. Screening and data extraction were conducted by two investigators. Bibliographies and citations of eligible studies were investigated.
In all 144 publications reporting on dementia (n = 49 publications, mainly Alzheimer disease), Parkinsonism (PD, n = 20), HIV-related neurocognitive impairment (n = 47), Huntington disease (HD, n = 19), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, n = 15), cerebellar degeneration (n = 4) and Lewy body dementia (n = 1). Of these studies, largely based on prevalent cases from retrospective data on urban populations, half originated from Nigeria and South Africa. The prevalence of dementia (Alzheimer disease) varied between <1% and 10.1% (0.7% and 5.6%) in population-based studies and from <1% to 47.8% in hospital-based studies. Incidence of dementia (Alzheimer disease) ranged from 8.7 to 21.8/1000/year (9.5 to 11.1), and major risk factors were advanced age and female sex. HIV-related neurocognitive impairment's prevalence (all from hospital-based studies) ranged from <1% to 80%. Population-based prevalence of PD and ALS varied from 10 to 235/100,000, and from 5 to 15/100,000 respectively while that for Huntington disease was 3.5/100,000. Equivalent figures for hospital based studies were the following: PD (0.41 to 7.2%), ALS (0.2 to 8.0/1000), and HD (0.2/100,000 to 46.0/100,000).
The body of literature on neurodegenerative disorders in SSA is large with regard to dementia and HIV-related neurocognitive disorders but limited for other neurodegenerative disorders. Shortcomings include few population-based studies, heterogeneous diagnostic criteria and uneven representation of countries on the continent. There are important knowledge gaps that need urgent action, in order to prepare the sub-continent for the anticipated local surge in neurodegenerative diseases.
撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)国家正经历着快速转变,预期寿命不断增加。因此,诸如神经退行性疾病等与年龄相关疾病的负担可能正在加重。我们对已发表的关于SSA常见神经退行性疾病及与HIV相关的神经认知障碍的研究进行了系统综述,以确定研究差距并为预防和控制方案提供依据。
我们通过PubMed检索MEDLINE、“公共卫生数据库”以及“神经流行病学与热带神经病学研究所”数据库,检索时间从建库至2013年2月,以查找SSA关于神经退行性疾病及与HIV相关的神经认知障碍的已发表原始研究。由两名研究人员进行筛选和数据提取。对符合条件研究的参考文献及引用文献进行了调查。
共有144篇出版物报告了痴呆(n = 49篇,主要为阿尔茨海默病)、帕金森症(PD,n = 20)、与HIV相关的神经认知障碍(n = 4)、亨廷顿病(HD,n = 19)、肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS,n = 15)、小脑变性(n = 4)和路易体痴呆(n = 1)。这些研究大多基于城市人口回顾性数据中的现患病例,其中一半来自尼日利亚和南非。在基于人群的研究中,痴呆(阿尔茨海默病)的患病率在<1%至10.1%(0.7%至5.6%)之间,在基于医院的研究中则在<1%至47.8%之间。痴呆(阿尔茨海默病)的发病率为8.7至21.8/1000/年(9.5至11.1),主要危险因素为高龄和女性。与HIV相关的神经认知障碍的患病率(均来自基于医院的研究)在<1%至80%之间。基于人群的PD和ALS患病率分别为10至235/10万和5至15/10万,而亨廷顿病的患病率为3.5/10万。基于医院研究中的相应数据如下:PD(0.41%至7.2%)、ALS(0.2至8.0/1000)和HD(0.2/10万至46.0/10万)。
关于SSA神经退行性疾病的文献,在痴呆和与HIV相关的神经认知障碍方面数量较多,但在其他神经退行性疾病方面有限。不足之处包括基于人群的研究较少、诊断标准不统一以及该大陆各国的代表性不均衡。存在重要的知识差距,需要紧急行动,以便该次大陆为预期的神经退行性疾病本地激增做好准备。