Chamberlain Jonviea D, Deriaz Olivier, Hund-Georgiadis Margret, Meier Sonja, Scheel-Sailer Anke, Schubert Martin, Stucki Gerold, Brinkhof Martin Wg
Swiss Paraplegic Research, Guido A. Zäch Strasse 4, CH-6207 Nottwil, Switzerland ; Department of Health Sciences and Health Policy, University of Lucerne, Lucerne, Switzerland.
Clinique Romande de Réadaption (CCR) and Institut de recherche en réadaptation, Sion, Switzerland.
Inj Epidemiol. 2015;2(1):28. doi: 10.1186/s40621-015-0061-4. Epub 2015 Nov 2.
Traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI) has a high personal and socio-economic impact. Effective public health prevention policies that aim to reduce this burden are reliant on contemporary information of the risk and underlying causes of TSCI. This study contextualizes Swiss annual incidence rates within the European context, and provides detailed estimates by age, gender and etiology towards informing targeted intervention strategies.
TSCI cases that occurred in the years 2005 to 2012 were identified as part of the Swiss Spinal Cord Injury (SwiSCI) cohort study through a rehabilitation-based study of local medical files.
The crude annual incidence rate (IR) estimate of TSCI for the study period was 18.0 (95 % confidence interval 16.9-19.2) per one million population; standardized to the WHO world population IR was 21.7 (20.3-23.1) population. The injury rate of TSCI in Switzerland was intermediate in comparison to estimates for other European countries, which ranged from around 8.3 in Denmark to 33.6 per million in Greece. Males exhibited consistently higher IRs than females, with a highest IR ratio (IRR) of 3.9 (2.8-5.5) in young adults (aged 16 to 30). Sports and leisure and transport-related injuries were the predominant causes of TSCI in the youngest age group (aged 16 to 30); falls were the predominant cause among the oldest age group (76 years or over). With increasing age, a greater proportion of fall-related TSCIs were due to low-level falls, with more than 80 % of fall-related TSCIs due to low-level falls in the oldest age group.
Evidence suggests sports/leisure- and transport-related injuries in young men and falls among the elderly as prime targets for prevention policies and programs.
创伤性脊髓损伤(TSCI)对个人和社会经济都有重大影响。旨在减轻这一负担的有效公共卫生预防政策依赖于有关TSCI风险和潜在原因的最新信息。本研究将瑞士的年发病率置于欧洲背景下进行分析,并按年龄、性别和病因提供详细估计,以为针对性干预策略提供参考。
通过对当地医疗档案进行基于康复的研究,确定2005年至2012年期间发生的TSCI病例作为瑞士脊髓损伤(SwiSCI)队列研究的一部分。
研究期间TSCI的粗年发病率估计为每百万人口18.0(95%置信区间16.9 - 19.2);根据世界卫生组织世界人口标准化后的发病率为21.7(20.3 - 23.1)/百万人口。与其他欧洲国家的估计值相比,瑞士的TSCI损伤率处于中等水平,其他欧洲国家的发病率从丹麦的约8.3/百万到希腊的33.6/百万不等。男性的发病率始终高于女性,在年轻人(16至30岁)中最高发病率比(IRR)为3.9(2.8 - 5.5)。在最年轻的年龄组(16至30岁)中,运动、休闲和交通相关损伤是TSCI的主要原因;在最年长的年龄组(76岁及以上)中,跌倒则是主要原因。随着年龄的增长,与跌倒相关的TSCI中因低水平跌倒导致的比例更大,在最年长的年龄组中,超过80%的与跌倒相关的TSCI是由低水平跌倒引起的。
有证据表明,年轻男性的运动/休闲和交通相关损伤以及老年人的跌倒应作为预防政策和项目的主要目标。