Institute of Environmental Medicine, Unit of Epidemiology, Karolinska Institutet, Box 210, SE-171 77, Stockholm, Sweden.
Institute of Environmental Medicine, Unit of Epidemiology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
BMC Geriatr. 2019 Feb 4;19(1):31. doi: 10.1186/s12877-019-1050-1.
Stroke incidence has declined during the past decades. Yet, there is a concern that an ageing population together with improved survival after stroke will result in a raised proportion of the population who have experienced a stroke, as well as increasing incidence rate of recurrent strokes, and, absolute numbers of strokes. The objectives of this study were to investigate how the age specific incidence rates of recurrent strokes have developed in relation to the incidence rates of first strokes and how the postponement in age look like, and to see how the prevalence proportion of stroke as well as the absolute number of incident strokes has changed over time.
This study includes the total Swedish population born 1890-1954 living in Sweden from 1987. Stroke was identified through hospital admissions and deaths in national health registers (mandatory for all hospitals in Sweden). Age specific incidence rates were calculated for first, second, all recurrent, and all strokes for each calendar year between 1994 and 2014 for each age between 60 and 104 years. The proportion in the population with a history of stroke up to 7 years back in time was also calculated for different age groups and for different calendar years.
Not only the incidence rate of first stroke but also of recurrent strokes have declined. The declines are evident in all ages up to 90 years of age, but not in ages above 90 years. Despite improved survival in stroke, the prevalence proportion has declined over the period and was around 3% in 2014 (somewhat higher for men than women). Even incident cases of stroke in absolute number has declined.
Decreasing incidence rates of stroke have offset an increase in both absolute and relative numbers of stroke that otherwise would have taken place due to improved survival and an ageing population. The decline in stroke recurrence has been as strong as the decline in first strokes.
在过去几十年中,中风发病率有所下降。然而,人们担心人口老龄化以及中风后生存率的提高,将会导致经历过中风的人群比例上升,以及复发性中风的发病率和绝对中风人数增加。本研究的目的是调查复发性中风的年龄特异性发病率与首次中风发病率的发展关系,以及年龄延迟的情况,并观察中风的患病率以及新发中风的绝对数量随时间的变化。
本研究包括 1890 年至 1954 年出生且居住在瑞典的所有瑞典人,纳入研究的时间范围为 1987 年至 2014 年。中风通过国家健康登记册中的医院入院和死亡记录进行识别(瑞典所有医院均强制报告)。为每个年龄组(60 至 104 岁)计算了 1994 年至 2014 年每个日历年内首次、第二次、所有复发性和所有中风的年龄特异性发病率。还为不同年龄组和不同日历年计算了 7 年内有中风病史的人群比例。
不仅首次中风的发病率,而且复发性中风的发病率都有所下降。这种下降在所有年龄组中都很明显,最高可达 90 岁,但在 90 岁以上的年龄组中并不明显。尽管中风患者的生存率有所提高,但在研究期间,患病率有所下降,2014 年约为 3%(男性略高于女性)。即使中风的绝对病例数也有所下降。
中风发病率的下降抵消了由于生存率提高和人口老龄化导致的中风绝对和相对数量的增加。中风复发的下降与首次中风的下降一样强烈。