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巴西全国范围内归因于糖尿病的超额死亡分析。

A nationwide analysis of the excess death attributable to diabetes in Brazil.

机构信息

Postgraduate Program in Epidemiology, School of Medicine and Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.

Department of Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, UK.

出版信息

J Glob Health. 2020 Jun;10(1):010401. doi: 10.7189/jogh.10.010401.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Data on mortality burden and excess deaths attributable to diabetes are sparse and frequently unreliable, particularly in low and middle-income countries. Estimates in Brazil to date have relied on death certificate data, which do not consider the multicausal nature of deaths. Our aim was to combine cohort data with national prevalence and mortality statistics to estimate the absolute number of deaths that could have been prevented if the mortality rates of people with diabetes were the same as for those without. In addition, we aimed to estimate the increase in burden when considering undiagnosed diabetes.

METHODS

We estimated self-reported diabetes prevalence from the National Health Survey (PNS) and overall mortality from the national mortality information system (SIM). We estimated the diabetes mortality rate ratio (rates of those with vs without diabetes) from the Brazilian Longitudinal Study of Adult Health (ELSA-Brasil), an ongoing cohort study. Joining estimates from these three sources, we calculated for the population the absolute number and the fraction of deaths attributable to diabetes. We repeated our analyses considering both self-reported and unknown diabetes, the latter estimated based on single point-in-time glycemic determinations in ELSA-Brasil. Finally, we compared results with diabetes-related mortality information from death certificates.

RESULTS

In 2013, 65 581 deaths, 9.1% of all deaths between the ages of 35-80, were attributable to known diabetes. If cases of unknown diabetes were considered, this figure would rise to 14.3%. In contrast, based on death certificates only, 5.3% of all death had diabetes as the underlying cause and 10.4% as any mentioned cause.

CONCLUSIONS

In this first report of diabetes mortality burden in Brazil using cohort data to estimate diabetes mortality rate ratios and the prevalence of unknown diabetes, we showed marked underestimation of the current burden, especially when unknown cases of diabetes are also considered.

摘要

背景

关于糖尿病导致的死亡负担和超额死亡人数的数据很少,而且往往不可靠,尤其是在低收入和中等收入国家。迄今为止,巴西的估计数依赖于死亡证明数据,而这些数据没有考虑到死亡的多因性。我们的目的是结合队列数据和国家流行率和死亡率统计数据,估算如果糖尿病患者的死亡率与非糖尿病患者相同,则可能预防的绝对死亡人数。此外,我们还旨在估计在考虑未诊断的糖尿病时负担的增加。

方法

我们根据全国健康调查(PNS)估计自我报告的糖尿病流行率,并根据国家死亡率信息系统(SIM)估计总死亡率。我们从巴西成人健康纵向研究(ELSA-Brasil)中估算了糖尿病死亡率比(有糖尿病和无糖尿病的人群的比率),这是一项正在进行的队列研究。通过这三个来源的估计结果,我们计算了人口中归因于糖尿病的绝对死亡人数和死亡比例。我们重复了分析,同时考虑了自我报告的和未知的糖尿病,后者是根据 ELSA-Brasil 中的单次血糖测定来估算的。最后,我们将结果与死亡证明中的糖尿病相关死亡率信息进行了比较。

结果

2013 年,65581 人死亡,占 35-80 岁人群所有死亡人数的 9.1%,归因于已知的糖尿病。如果考虑到未知的糖尿病病例,这个数字将上升到 14.3%。相比之下,仅根据死亡证明,所有死亡中有 5.3%的死亡有糖尿病作为根本原因,10.4%的死亡有任何提到的原因。

结论

这是巴西首次使用队列数据来估算糖尿病死亡率比和未知糖尿病的流行率来报告糖尿病死亡负担的报告,我们发现目前的负担被严重低估,尤其是当考虑到未知的糖尿病病例时。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/47a6/7101024/6dae3850428b/jogh-10-010401-F1.jpg

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