| Literature DB >> 33309175 |
Gregory A Roth1, George A Mensah2, Catherine O Johnson3, Giovanni Addolorato4, Enrico Ammirati5, Larry M Baddour6, Noël C Barengo7, Andrea Z Beaton8, Emelia J Benjamin9, Catherine P Benziger10, Aimé Bonny11, Michael Brauer12, Marianne Brodmann13, Thomas J Cahill14, Jonathan Carapetis15, Alberico L Catapano16, Sumeet S Chugh17, Leslie T Cooper18, Josef Coresh19, Michael Criqui20, Nicole DeCleene21, Kim A Eagle21, Sophia Emmons-Bell3, Valery L Feigin22, Joaquim Fernández-Solà23, Gerry Fowkes24, Emmanuela Gakidou22, Scott M Grundy25, Feng J He26, George Howard27, Frank Hu28, Lesley Inker29, Ganesan Karthikeyan30, Nicholas Kassebaum22, Walter Koroshetz31, Carl Lavie32, Donald Lloyd-Jones33, Hong S Lu34, Antonio Mirijello35, Awoke Misganaw Temesgen3, Ali Mokdad3, Andrew E Moran36, Paul Muntner27, Jagat Narula37, Bruce Neal38, Mpiko Ntsekhe39, Glaucia Moraes de Oliveira40, Catherine Otto22, Mayowa Owolabi41, Michael Pratt20, Sanjay Rajagopalan42, Marissa Reitsma43, Antonio Luiz P Ribeiro44, Nancy Rigotti45, Anthony Rodgers46, Craig Sable47, Saate Shakil22, Karen Sliwa-Hahnle39, Benjamin Stark22, Johan Sundström48, Patrick Timpel49, Imad M Tleyjeh50, Marco Valgimigli51, Theo Vos22, Paul K Whelton52, Magdi Yacoub53, Liesl Zuhlke39, Christopher Murray3, Valentin Fuster54.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), principally ischemic heart disease (IHD) and stroke, are the leading cause of global mortality and a major contributor to disability. This paper reviews the magnitude of total CVD burden, including 13 underlying causes of cardiovascular death and 9 related risk factors, using estimates from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study 2019. GBD, an ongoing multinational collaboration to provide comparable and consistent estimates of population health over time, used all available population-level data sources on incidence, prevalence, case fatality, mortality, and health risks to produce estimates for 204 countries and territories from 1990 to 2019. Prevalent cases of total CVD nearly doubled from 271 million (95% uncertainty interval [UI]: 257 to 285 million) in 1990 to 523 million (95% UI: 497 to 550 million) in 2019, and the number of CVD deaths steadily increased from 12.1 million (95% UI:11.4 to 12.6 million) in 1990, reaching 18.6 million (95% UI: 17.1 to 19.7 million) in 2019. The global trends for disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) and years of life lost also increased significantly, and years lived with disability doubled from 17.7 million (95% UI: 12.9 to 22.5 million) to 34.4 million (95% UI:24.9 to 43.6 million) over that period. The total number of DALYs due to IHD has risen steadily since 1990, reaching 182 million (95% UI: 170 to 194 million) DALYs, 9.14 million (95% UI: 8.40 to 9.74 million) deaths in the year 2019, and 197 million (95% UI: 178 to 220 million) prevalent cases of IHD in 2019. The total number of DALYs due to stroke has risen steadily since 1990, reaching 143 million (95% UI: 133 to 153 million) DALYs, 6.55 million (95% UI: 6.00 to 7.02 million) deaths in the year 2019, and 101 million (95% UI: 93.2 to 111 million) prevalent cases of stroke in 2019. Cardiovascular diseases remain the leading cause of disease burden in the world. CVD burden continues its decades-long rise for almost all countries outside high-income countries, and alarmingly, the age-standardized rate of CVD has begun to rise in some locations where it was previously declining in high-income countries. There is an urgent need to focus on implementing existing cost-effective policies and interventions if the world is to meet the targets for Sustainable Development Goal 3 and achieve a 30% reduction in premature mortality due to noncommunicable diseases.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular diseases; global health; health policy; population health
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33309175 PMCID: PMC7755038 DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2020.11.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Coll Cardiol ISSN: 0735-1097 Impact factor: 24.094