The global, regional, and national patterns of change in the burden of congenital birth defects, 1990–2021: an analysis of the global burden of disease study 2021 and forecast to 2040
Nanjing Children's Hospital · Nanjing University · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Congenital birth defects (CBDs) present enormous challenges to global healthcare systems. These conditions severely impact patients' health and underscore issues related to socioeconomic development and healthcare accessibility and efficiency. Previous studies have been geographically limited and lacked comprehensive global analysis. This study provides global, regional, and national disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) data for four major congenital birth defects-congenital heart defects (CHD), neural tube defects (NTDs), digestive congenital anomalies (DCAs), and Down syndrome (DS) from 1990 to 2021, emphasizing health inequalities. The goal is to offer scientific evidence for optimizing resource allocation, focusing on high-burden populations, and reducing disease burden.
This study systematically evaluated the global, regional, and national burden of CBDs and their changes from 1990 to 2021 using the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2021. To conduct a more focused analysis, four specific CBDs were selected: CHD, NTDs, DCAs, and DS. DALYs were used as the metric, combined with the sociodemographic index (SDI). Analyses included the slope index of inequality and concentration index to measure health inequalities, frontier analysis to estimate achievable outcomes based on development levels, decomposition analysis to identify drivers of disease burden changes, Joinpoint regression analysis to assess temporal trends, and the Bayesian age-period-cohort (BAPC) model to predict future disease burden trends.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 97.79
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 47
Authors
7- ZBZihao BaiCorresponding
Nanjing Children's Hospital, Nanjing University
- JHJingru Han
Stomatology Hospital, Guangzhou Medical University
- JAJia An
Nanjing University, Nanjing Children's Hospital
- HWHao Wang
Second Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing Medical University
- XDXueying Du
Second Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing Medical University
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Burden of disease
- Disease burden
- Environmental health
- Disease
- Pediatrics
- Pathology