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CARLO MARIA BARBAGALLO

Worldwide trends in diabetes prevalence and treatment from 1990 to 2022: a pooled analysis of 1108 populationrepresentative studies with 141 million participants

  • Authors: NCD Risk Factor Collaboration (NCD-RisC); Bin Zhou; Archie W Rayner; Prof Edward W Gregg; Kate E Sheffer; Rodrigo M Carrillo-Larco; James E Bennett; Prof Jonathan E Shaw; Prof Christopher J Paciorek; Rosie K Singleton; Ana Barradas Pires; Gretchen A Stevens; Prof Goodarz Danaei; Victor PF Lhoste; Nowell H Phelps; Rachel A Heap; Lakshya Jain; Ysé d’Ailhaud de Brisis; Agnese Galeazzi; Prof Andre P Kengne; Anu Mishra; Nayu Ikeda; Prof Hsien-Ho Lin; Prof Carlos A Aguilar-Salinas; Ranjit Mohan Anjana; Prof Habiba Ben Romdhane; Prof Kairat Davletov; Shubash Ganapathy; Christin Heidemann; Prof Yousef Saleh Khader; Prof Young-Ho Khang; Prof Avula Laxmaiah; Prof Jean Claude N Mbanya; Viswanathan Mohan; Prof KM Venkat Narayan; Meda E Pavkov; Prof Eugène Sobngwi; Alisha N Wade; Novie O Younger-Coleman; Prof Tomasz Zdrojewski; Prof Majid Ezzati Leandra Abarca-Gómez; Mohsen Abbasi-Kangevari; Hanan F Abdul Rahim; Niveen M Abu-Rmeileh; Shalkar Adambekov; Robert J Adams; Wichai Aekplakorn; Shoaib Afza; Imelda A Agdeppa; Javad Aghazadeh-Attari; Carlos A Aguilar-Salinas; Charles Agyemang; Noor Ani Ahmad; Ali Ahmadi; Naser Ahmadi; Nastaran Ahmadi; Soheir H Ahmed; Wolfgang Ahrens; Kamel Ajlouni; Sarah F Al-Hamli; Halima Al-Hinai; Jawad A Al-Lawati; Deena Al Asfoor; Monira Alarouj; Fadia AlBuhairan; Shahla AlDhukair; Mohamed M Ali; Mohammed K Ali; Anna V Alieva; Farbod Alinezhad; Abdullah Alkandari; Ala’a Alkerwi; Eman Aly; Deepak N Amarapurkar; Lars Bo Andersen; Sigmund A Anderssen; Dolores S Andrade; Ranjit Mohan Anjana; Alireza Ansari-Moghaddam; Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri; Joana Araújo; Tahir Aris; Raphael E Arku; Nimmathota Arlappa; Krishna K Aryal; Thor Aspelund; Felix K Assah; Batyrbek Assembekov; Shiu Lun Au Yeung; Juha Auvinen; Mária Avdičová; Kishwar Azad; Ana Azevedo; Mohsen Azimi-Nezhad; Fereidoun Azizi; Flora Bacopoulou; Nagalla Balakrishna; Yulia Balanova; Mohamed Bamoshmoosh; Maciej Banach; Piotr Bandosz; José R Banegas; Carlo Maria Barbagallo; Alberto Barcelo; Maja Baretić; Lena Barrera; Marta Barreto; Abdul Basit; Anwar M Batieha; Aline P Batista; Louise A Baur; Antonisamy Belavendra; Habiba Ben Romdhane; Theodora Benedek; Mikhail Benet; Michaela Benzeval; Salim Berkinbayev; Antonio Bernabe-Ortiz; Ximena Berrios Carrasola; Heloísa Bettiol; Augustin F Beybey; Santosh K Bhargava; Yufang Bi; Elysée Claude Bika Lele; Mukharram M Bikbov; Bihungum Bista; Peter Bjerregaard; Espen Bjertness; Marius B Bjertness; Cecilia Björkelund; Katia V Bloch; Anneke Blokstra; Martin Bobak; Bernhard O Boehm; Jose G Boggia; Carlos P Boissonnet; Stig E Bojesen; Marialaura Bonaccio; Alice Bonilla-Vargas; Herman Borghs; Steve Botomba; Pascal Bovet; Imperia Brajkovich; Hermann Brenner; Lizzy M Brewster; Garry R Brian; Yajaira Briceño; Miguel Brito; Gloria Bueno; Anna Bugge; Frank Buntinx; Antonio Cabrera de León; Roberta B Caixeta; Günay Can; Ana Paula C Cândido; Mario V Capanzana; Naděžda Čapková; Eduardo Capuano; Rocco Capuano; Vincenzo Capuano; Viviane C Cardoso; Axel C Carlsson; Rodrigo M Carrillo-Larco; Felipe F Casanueva; Laura Censi; Marvin Cervantes–Loaiza; Charalambos A Chadjigeorgiou; Parinya Chamnan; Snehalatha Chamukuttan; Queenie Chan; Fadi J Charchar; Nish Chaturvedi; Chien-Jen Chen; Huashuai Chen; Long-Sheng Chen; Ching-Yu Cheng; Bahman Cheraghian; Angela Chetrit; Shu-Ti Chiou; María-Dolores Chirlaque; Jerzy Chudek; Renata Cifkova; Massimo Cirillo; Frank Claessens; Janine Clarke; Emmanuel Cohen; Hans Concin; Cyrus Cooper; Cojocaru R Cosmin; Simona Costanzo; Melanie J Cowan; Chris Cowell; Amelia C Crampin; Ana B Crujeiras; Juan J Cruz; Felipe V Cureau; Sarah Cuschieri; Graziella D’Arrigo; Eleonora d’Orsi; Haroldo da Silva-Ferreira; Jean Dallongeville; Albertino Damasceno; Rachel Dankner; Saeed Dastgiri; Luc Dauchet; Kairat Davletov; Amalia De Curtis; Giovanni de Gaetano; Stefaan De Henauw; David De Ridder; Mohan Deepa; Vincent DeGennaro Jr; Stefaan Demarest; Elaine Dennison; Valérie Deschamps; Meghna
  • Publication year: 2024
  • Type: Articolo in rivista
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/664601

Abstract

Background—Diabetes can be detected at the primary health-care level, and effective treatments lower the risk of complications. There are insufficient data on the coverage of treatment for diabetes and how it has changed. We estimated trends from 1990 to 2022 in diabetes prevalence and treatment for 200 countries and territories. Methods—We used data from 1108 population-representative studies with 141 million participants aged 18 years and older with measurements of fasting glucose and glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c), and information on diabetes treatment. We defined diabetes as having a fasting plasma glucose (FPG) of 7·0 mmol/L or higher, having an HbA1c of 6·5% or higher, or taking medication for diabetes. We defined diabetes treatment as the proportion of people with diabetes who were taking medication for diabetes. We analysed the data in a Bayesian hierarchical meta-regression model to estimate diabetes prevalence and treatment. Findings—In 2022, an estimated 828 million (95% credible interval [CrI] 757–908) adults (those aged 18 years and older) had diabetes, an increase of 630 million (554–713) from 1990. From 1990 to 2022, the age-standardised prevalence of diabetes increased in 131 countries for women and in 155 countries for men with a posterior probability of more than 0·80. The largest increases were in low-income and middle-income countries in southeast Asia (eg, Malaysia), south Asia (eg, Pakistan), the Middle East and north Africa (eg, Egypt), and Latin America and the Caribbean (eg, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, and Costa Rica). Age-standardised prevalence neither increased nor decreased with a posterior probability of more than 0·80 in some countries in western and central Europe, sub-Saharan Africa, east Asia and the Pacific, Canada, and some Pacific island nations where prevalence was already high in 1990; it decreased with a posterior probability of more than 0·80 in women in Japan, Spain, and France, and in men in Nauru. The lowest prevalence in theworld in 2022 was in western Europe and east Africa for both sexes, and in Japan and Canada for women, and the highest prevalence in the world in 2022 was in countries in Polynesia and Micronesia, some countries in the Caribbean and the Middle East and north Africa, as well as Pakistan and Malaysia. In 2022, 445 million (95% CrI 401–496) adults aged 30 years or older with diabetes did not receive treatment (59% of adults aged 30 years or older with diabetes), 3·5 times the number in 1990. From 1990 to 2022, diabetes treatment coverage increased in 118 countries for women and 98 countries for men with a posterior probability of more than 0·80. The largest improvement in treatment coverage was in some countries from central and western Europe and Latin America (Mexico, Colombia, Chile, and Costa Rica), Canada, South Korea, Russia, Seychelles, and Jordan. There was no increase in treatment coverage in most countries in sub-Saharan Africa; the Caribbean; Pacific island nations; and south, southeast, and central Asia. In 2022, age-standardised treatment coverage was lowest in countries in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia, and treatment coverage was less than 10% in some African countries. Treatment coverage was 55% or higher in South Korea, many high-income western countries, and some countries in central and eastern Europe (eg, Poland, Czechia, and Russia), Latin America (eg, Costa Rica, Chile, and Mexico), and the Middle East and north Africa (eg, Jordan, Qatar, and Kuwait). Interpretation—In most countries, especially in low-income and middle-income countries, diabetes treatment has not increased at all or has not increased sufficiently in comparison with the rise in prevalence. The burden of diabetes and untreated diabetes is increasingly borne by low-income and middle-income countries. The expansion of health insurance and primary health care should be accompanied with di