Hong Jiang, Zeye Liu, Peijian Wei, Fengwen Zhang, Shouzheng Wang, Wen-Bin Ou-Yang, Xiaofei Li, Xiang-Bin Pan
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Over the past three decades, significant disparities in the global burden of cardiovascular disease (CVD) have been observed, particularly CVD attributed to secondhand smoke. However, a comprehensive understanding of global trends and their interaction with secondhand smoke remains inadequate.
Methods: Using Global Burden of Disease data (1990-2019), an age-period-cohort analysis examined temporal trends in CVD mortality among secondhand smoke-exposed populations, considering age, period and cohort interactions.
Results: Over the 30-year period, the global number of CVD deaths attributed to secondhand smoke increased substantially, from 432.6 thousand in 1990 (95% UI: 357.4-508.3) to 598.5 thousand in 2019 (95% UI: 489.7-713.5), representing a 38.4% increase (95% UI: 26.8%-49.5%). In 2019, CVD accounted for 45.9% of all deaths attributable to secondhand smoke among both sexes globally. Among these CVD deaths, ischaemic heart disease predominated, accounting for 66.4% of cases, compared with stroke. The distribution by sex revealed a slightly lower percentage of males (46.5%) than females (53.5%). Age-period-cohort models show overall global decline in CVD mortality due to secondhand smoke over 30 years, with regional, sex and subtype variations. Notably, a higher Sociodemographic Index (SDI) correlated with a greater reduction in mortality, exhibiting a significant 39.1% decrease in high SDI areas (95% UI: 35.6%-42.3%), in stark contrast to the minimal change observed in low SDI areas (0.1%, 95% UI: -52.4%-62.2%).
Conclusions: This study highlights the importance of considering secondhand smoke as a modifiable CVD risk. Further research is needed to understand disparities in CVD burden across development levels, sexes and subtypes.
期刊介绍:
Open Heart is an online-only, open access cardiology journal that aims to be “open” in many ways: open access (free access for all readers), open peer review (unblinded peer review) and open data (data sharing is encouraged). The goal is to ensure maximum transparency and maximum impact on research progress and patient care. The journal is dedicated to publishing high quality, peer reviewed medical research in all disciplines and therapeutic areas of cardiovascular medicine. Research is published across all study phases and designs, from study protocols to phase I trials to meta-analyses, including small or specialist studies. Opinionated discussions on controversial topics are welcomed. Open Heart aims to operate a fast submission and review process with continuous publication online, to ensure timely, up-to-date research is available worldwide. The journal adheres to a rigorous and transparent peer review process, and all articles go through a statistical assessment to ensure robustness of the analyses. Open Heart is an official journal of the British Cardiovascular Society.