Forecasting the mortality burden of coronary heart disease and stroke in Germany: National trends and regional inequalities
The decline of cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality has slowed in many countries, including Germany. We examined the implications of this trend for future coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke mortality in Germany considering persistent mortality inequalities between former East and West Germany...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of cardiology 2023-12, Vol.393, p.131359-131359, Article 131359 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The decline of cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality has slowed in many countries, including Germany. We examined the implications of this trend for future coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke mortality in Germany considering persistent mortality inequalities between former East and West Germany.
We retrieved demographic and mortality data from 1991 to 2019 from the German Federal Statistical Office. Using a Bayesian age-period-cohort framework, we projected CHD and stroke mortality from 2019 to 2035, stratified by sex and German region. We decomposed annual changes in deaths into three components (mortality rates, population age structure and population size) and assessed regional inequalities with age-sex-standardized mortality ratios.
We confirmed that declines of CVD mortality rates in Germany will likely stagnate. From 2019 to 2035, we projected fewer annual CHD deaths (114,600 to 103,500 [95%-credible interval: 81,700; 134,000]) and an increase in stroke deaths (51,300 to 53,700 [41,400; 72,000]). Decomposing past and projected mortality, we showed that population ageing was and is offset by declining mortality rates. This likely reverses after 2030 leading to increased CVD deaths thereafter. Inequalities between East and West declined substantially since 1991 and are projected to stabilize for CHD but narrow for stroke.
CVD deaths in Germany likely keep declining until 2030, but may increase thereafter due to population ageing if the reduction in mortality rates slows further. East-West mortality inequalities for CHD remain stable but may converge for stroke. Underlying risk factor trends need to be monitored and addressed by public health policy.
•In the next decade, decreasing mortality rates will largely compensate population ageing.•This trend might reverse around 2030 if the decline in cardiovascular mortality rates slows down as projected.•Reductions in mortality inequalities for coronary heart disease between former East and West Germany are unlikely.•Mortality inequalities from stroke between former East and West Germany likely converge further.•Evidence on trends of cardiometabolic risk factors and our findings necessitate careful epidemiological surveillance. |
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ISSN: | 0167-5273 1874-1754 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijcard.2023.131359 |