TY - JOUR
T1 - Global, regional, and national comparative risk assessment of 84 behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risks or clusters of risks, 1990-2016
T2 - A systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016
AU - GBD 2016 Risk Factors Collaborators
AU - Gakidou, Emmanuela
AU - Afshin, Ashkan
AU - Abajobir, Amanuel Alemu
AU - Abate, Kalkidan Hassen
AU - Abbafati, Cristiana
AU - Abbas, Kaja M.
AU - Abd-Allah, Foad
AU - Abdulle, Abdishakur M.
AU - Abera, Semaw Ferede
AU - Aboyans, Victor
AU - Abu-Raddad, Laith J.
AU - Abu-Rmeileh, Niveen M.E.
AU - Abyu, Gebre Yitayih
AU - Adedeji, Isaac Akinkunmi
AU - Adetokunboh, Olatunji
AU - Afarideh, Mohsen
AU - Agrawal, Anurag
AU - Agrawal, Sutapa
AU - Ahmad Kiadaliri, Aliasghar
AU - Ahmadieh, Hamid
AU - Ahmed, Muktar Beshir
AU - Aichour, Amani Nidhal
AU - Aichour, Ibtihel
AU - Aichour, Miloud Taki Eddine
AU - Akinyemi, Rufus Olusola
AU - Akseer, Nadia
AU - Alahdab, Fares
AU - Al-Aly, Ziyad
AU - Alam, Khurshid
AU - Alam, Noore
AU - Alam, Tahiya
AU - Alasfoor, Deena
AU - Alene, Kefyalew Addis
AU - Ali, Komal
AU - Alizadeh-Navaei, Reza
AU - Alkerwi, Ala'a
AU - Alla, François
AU - Allebeck, Peter
AU - Al-Raddadi, Rajaa
AU - Alsharif, Ubai
AU - Altirkawi, Khalid A.
AU - Alvis-Guzman, Nelson
AU - Amare, Azmeraw T.
AU - Amini, Erfan
AU - Ammar, Walid
AU - Amoako, Yaw Ampem
AU - Ansari, Hossein
AU - Antó, Josep M.
AU - Antonio, Carl Abelardo T.
AU - Anwari, Palwasha
AU - Arian, Nicholas
AU - Ärnlöv, Johan
AU - Artaman, Al
AU - Aryal, Krishna Kumar
AU - Asayesh, Hamid
AU - Asgedom, Solomon Weldegebreal
AU - Atey, Tesfay Mehari
AU - Avila-Burgos, Leticia
AU - Avokpaho, Euripide Frinel G.Arthur
AU - Awasthi, Ashish
AU - Azzopardi, Peter
AU - Bacha, Umar
AU - Badawi, Alaa
AU - Balakrishnan, Kalpana
AU - Ballew, Shoshana H.
AU - Barac, Aleksandra
AU - Barber, Ryan M.
AU - Barker-Collo, Suzanne L.
AU - Bärnighausen, Till
AU - Barquera, Simon
AU - Barregard, Lars
AU - Barrero, Lope H.
AU - Batis, Carolina
AU - Battle, Katherine E.
AU - Baune, Bernhard T.
AU - Beardsley, Justin
AU - Bedi, Neeraj
AU - Beghi, Ettore
AU - Bell, Michelle L.
AU - Bennett, Derrick A.
AU - Bennett, James R.
AU - Bensenor, Isabela M.
AU - Berhane, Adugnaw
AU - Berhe, Derbew Fikadu
AU - Bernabé, Eduardo
AU - Betsu, Balem Demtsu
AU - Beuran, Mircea
AU - Beyene, Addisu Shunu
AU - Bhansali, Anil
AU - Bhutta, Zulfqar A.
AU - Bikbov, Boris
AU - Birungi, Charles
AU - Biryukov, Stan
AU - Blosser, Christopher D.
AU - Boneya, Dube Jara
AU - Bou-Orm, Ibrahim R.
AU - Brauer, Michael
AU - Breitborde, Nicholas J.K.
AU - Brenner, Hermann
AU - Brugha, Traolach S.
AU - Bulto, Lemma Negesa Bulto
AU - Baumgarner, Blair R.
AU - Butt, Zahid A.
AU - Cahuana-Hurtado, Lucero
AU - Cárdenas, Rosario
AU - Carrero, Juan Jesus
AU - Castañeda-Orjuela, Carlos A.
AU - Catalá-López, Ferrán
AU - Cercy, Kelly
AU - Chang, Hsing Yi
AU - Charlson, Fiona J.
AU - Chimed-Ochir, Odgerel
AU - Chisumpa, Vesper Hichilombwe
AU - Chitheer, Abdulaal A.
AU - Christensen, Hanne
AU - Christopher, Devasahayam Jesudas
AU - Cirillo, Massimo
AU - Cohen, Aaron J.
AU - Comfort, Haley
AU - Cooper, Cyrus
AU - Coresh, Josef
AU - Cornaby, Leslie
AU - Cortesi, Paolo Angelo
AU - Criqui, Michael H.
AU - Crump, John A.
AU - Dandona, Lalit
AU - Dandona, Rakhi
AU - Das Neves, José
AU - Davey, Gail
AU - Davitoiu, Dragos V.
AU - Davletov, Kairat
AU - De Courten, Barbora
AU - Degenhardt, Louisa
AU - Deiparine, Selina
AU - Dellavalle, Robert P.
AU - Deribe, Kebede
AU - Deshpande, Aniruddha
AU - Dharmaratne, Samath D.
AU - Ding, Eric L.
AU - Djalalinia, Shirin
AU - Do, Huyen Phuc
AU - Dokova, Klara
AU - Doku, David Teye
AU - Dorsey, E. Ray
AU - Driscoll, Tim R.
AU - Dubey, Manisha
AU - Duncan, Bruce Bartholow
AU - Duncan, Sarah
AU - Ebert, Natalie
AU - Ebrahimi, Hedyeh
AU - El-Khatib, Ziad Ziad
AU - Enayati, Ahmadali
AU - Endries, Aman Yesuf
AU - Ermakov, Sergey Petrovich
AU - Erskine, Holly E.
AU - Eshrati, Babak
AU - Eskandarieh, Sharareh
AU - Esteghamati, Alireza
AU - Estep, Kara
AU - Faraon, Emerito Jose Aquino
AU - Farinha, Carla Sofia E.Sa
AU - Faro, André
AU - Farzadfar, Farshad
AU - Fay, Kairsten
AU - Feigin, Valery L.
AU - Fereshtehnejad, Seyed Mohammad
AU - Fernandes, João C.
AU - Ferrari, Alize J.
AU - Feyissa, Tesfaye Regassa
AU - Filip, Irina
AU - Fischer, Florian
AU - Fitzmaurice, Christina
AU - Flaxman, Abraham D.
AU - Foigt, Nataliya
AU - Foreman, Kyle J.
AU - Frostad, Joseph J.
AU - Fullman, Nancy
AU - Fürst, Thomas
AU - Furtado, Joao M.
AU - Ganji, Morsaleh
AU - Garcia-Basteiro, Alberto L.
AU - Gebrehiwot, Tsegaye Tewelde
AU - Geleijnse, Johanna M.
AU - Geleto, Ayele
AU - Gemechu, Bikila Lencha
AU - Gesesew, Hailay Abrha
AU - Gething, Peter W.
AU - Ghajar, Alireza
AU - Gibney, Katherine B.
AU - Gill, Paramjit Singh
AU - Gillum, Richard F.
AU - Giref, Ababi Zergaw
AU - Gishu, Melkamu Dedefo
AU - Giussani, Giorgia
AU - Godwin, William W.
AU - Gona, Philimon N.
AU - Goodridge, Amador
AU - Gopalani, Sameer Vali
AU - Goryakin, Yevgeniy
AU - Goulart, Alessandra Carvalho
AU - Graetz, Nicholas
AU - Gugnani, Harish Chander
AU - Guo, Jingwen
AU - Gupta, Rajeev
AU - Gupta, Tanush
AU - Gupta, Vipin
AU - Gutiérrez, Reyna A.
AU - Hachinski, Vladimir
AU - Hafezi-Nejad, Nima
AU - Hailu, Gessessew Bugssa
AU - Hamadeh, Randah Ribhi
AU - Hamidi, Samer
AU - Hammami, Mouhanad
AU - Handal, Alexis J.
AU - Hankey, Graeme J.
AU - Harb, Hilda L.
AU - Hareri, Habtamu Abera
AU - Hassanvand, Mohammad Sadegh
AU - Havmoeller, Rasmus
AU - Hawley, Caitlin
AU - Hay, Simon I.
AU - Hedayati, Mohammad T.
AU - Hendrie, Delia
AU - Heredia-Pi, Ileana Beatriz
AU - Hoek, Hans W.
AU - Horita, Nobuyuki
AU - Hosgood, H. Dean
AU - Hostiuc, Sorin
AU - Hoy, Damian G.
AU - Hsairi, Mohamed
AU - Hu, Guoqing
AU - Huang, Hsiang
AU - Huang, John J.
AU - Iburg, Kim Moesgaard
AU - Ikeda, Chad
AU - Inoue, Manami
AU - Irvine, Caleb Mackay Salpeter
AU - Jackson, Maria Delores
AU - Jacobsen, Kathryn H.
AU - Jahanmehr, Nader
AU - Jakovljevic, Mihajlo B.
AU - Jauregui, Alejandra
AU - Javanbakht, Mehdi
AU - Johnson, Catherine O.
AU - McAlinden, Colm
AU - Melaku, Yohannes Adama
AU - Muller, Kate
AU - Nguyen, Minh
AU - Pesudovs, Konrad
AU - Phillips, Michael Robert
PY - 2017/9/16
Y1 - 2017/9/16
N2 - Background: The Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2016 (GBD 2016) provides a comprehensive assessment of risk factor exposure and attributable burden of disease. By providing estimates over a long time series, this study can monitor risk exposure trends critical to health surveillance and inform policy debates on the importance of addressing risks in context. Methods: We used the comparative risk assessment framework developed for previous iterations of GBD to estimate levels and trends in exposure, attributable deaths, and attributable disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs), by age group, sex, year, and location for 84 behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risks or clusters of risks from 1990 to 2016. This study included 481 risk-outcome pairs that met the GBD study criteria for convincing or probable evidence of causation. We extracted relative risk (RR) and exposure estimates from 22 717 randomised controlled trials, cohorts, pooled cohorts, household surveys, census data, satellite data, and other sources, according to the GBD 2016 source counting methods. Using the counterfactual scenario of theoretical minimum risk exposure level (TMREL), we estimated the portion of deaths and DALYs that could be attributed to a given risk. Finally, we explored four drivers of trends in attributable burden: population growth, population ageing, trends in risk exposure, and all other factors combined. Findings: Since 1990, exposure increased significantly for 30 risks, did not change significantly for four risks, and decreased significantly for 31 risks. Among risks that are leading causes of burden of disease, child growth failure and household air pollution showed the most significant declines, while metabolic risks, such as body-mass index and high fasting plasma glucose, showed significant increases. In 2016, at Level 3 of the hierarchy, the three leading risk factors in terms of attributable DALYs at the global level for men were smoking (124.1 million DALYs [95% UI 111.2 million to 137.0 million]), high systolic blood pressure (122.2 million DALYs [110.3 million to 133.3 million], and low birthweight and short gestation (83.0 million DALYs [78.3 million to 87.7 million]), and for women, were high systolic blood pressure (89.9 million DALYs [80.9 million to 98.2 million]), high body-mass index (64.8 million DALYs [44.4 million to 87.6 million]), and high fasting plasma glucose (63.8 million DALYs [53.2 million to 76.3 million]). In 2016 in 113 countries, the leading risk factor in terms of attributable DALYs was a metabolic risk factor. Smoking remained among the leading five risk factors for DALYs for 109 countries, while low birthweight and short gestation was the leading risk factor for DALYs in 38 countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. In terms of important drivers of change in trends of burden attributable to risk factors, between 2006 and 2016 exposure to risks explains an 9.3% (6.9-11.6) decline in deaths and a 10.8% (8.3-13.1) decrease in DALYs at the global level, while population ageing accounts for 14.9% (12.7-17.5) of deaths and 6.2% (3.9-8.7) of DALYs, and population growth for 12.4% (10.1-14.9) of deaths and 12.4% (10.1-14.9) of DALYs. The largest contribution of trends in risk exposure to disease burden is seen between ages 1 year and 4 years, where a decline of 27.3% (24.9-29.7) of the change in DALYs between 2006 and 2016 can be attributed to declines in exposure to risks. Interpretation: Increasingly detailed understanding of the trends in risk exposure and the RRs for each risk-outcome pair provide insights into both the magnitude of health loss attributable to risks and how modification of risk exposure has contributed to health trends. Metabolic risks warrant particular policy attention, due to their large contribution to global disease burden, increasing trends, and variable patterns across countries at the same level of development. GBD 2016 findings show that, while it has huge potential to improve health, risk modification has played a relatively small part in the past decade.
AB - Background: The Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2016 (GBD 2016) provides a comprehensive assessment of risk factor exposure and attributable burden of disease. By providing estimates over a long time series, this study can monitor risk exposure trends critical to health surveillance and inform policy debates on the importance of addressing risks in context. Methods: We used the comparative risk assessment framework developed for previous iterations of GBD to estimate levels and trends in exposure, attributable deaths, and attributable disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs), by age group, sex, year, and location for 84 behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risks or clusters of risks from 1990 to 2016. This study included 481 risk-outcome pairs that met the GBD study criteria for convincing or probable evidence of causation. We extracted relative risk (RR) and exposure estimates from 22 717 randomised controlled trials, cohorts, pooled cohorts, household surveys, census data, satellite data, and other sources, according to the GBD 2016 source counting methods. Using the counterfactual scenario of theoretical minimum risk exposure level (TMREL), we estimated the portion of deaths and DALYs that could be attributed to a given risk. Finally, we explored four drivers of trends in attributable burden: population growth, population ageing, trends in risk exposure, and all other factors combined. Findings: Since 1990, exposure increased significantly for 30 risks, did not change significantly for four risks, and decreased significantly for 31 risks. Among risks that are leading causes of burden of disease, child growth failure and household air pollution showed the most significant declines, while metabolic risks, such as body-mass index and high fasting plasma glucose, showed significant increases. In 2016, at Level 3 of the hierarchy, the three leading risk factors in terms of attributable DALYs at the global level for men were smoking (124.1 million DALYs [95% UI 111.2 million to 137.0 million]), high systolic blood pressure (122.2 million DALYs [110.3 million to 133.3 million], and low birthweight and short gestation (83.0 million DALYs [78.3 million to 87.7 million]), and for women, were high systolic blood pressure (89.9 million DALYs [80.9 million to 98.2 million]), high body-mass index (64.8 million DALYs [44.4 million to 87.6 million]), and high fasting plasma glucose (63.8 million DALYs [53.2 million to 76.3 million]). In 2016 in 113 countries, the leading risk factor in terms of attributable DALYs was a metabolic risk factor. Smoking remained among the leading five risk factors for DALYs for 109 countries, while low birthweight and short gestation was the leading risk factor for DALYs in 38 countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. In terms of important drivers of change in trends of burden attributable to risk factors, between 2006 and 2016 exposure to risks explains an 9.3% (6.9-11.6) decline in deaths and a 10.8% (8.3-13.1) decrease in DALYs at the global level, while population ageing accounts for 14.9% (12.7-17.5) of deaths and 6.2% (3.9-8.7) of DALYs, and population growth for 12.4% (10.1-14.9) of deaths and 12.4% (10.1-14.9) of DALYs. The largest contribution of trends in risk exposure to disease burden is seen between ages 1 year and 4 years, where a decline of 27.3% (24.9-29.7) of the change in DALYs between 2006 and 2016 can be attributed to declines in exposure to risks. Interpretation: Increasingly detailed understanding of the trends in risk exposure and the RRs for each risk-outcome pair provide insights into both the magnitude of health loss attributable to risks and how modification of risk exposure has contributed to health trends. Metabolic risks warrant particular policy attention, due to their large contribution to global disease burden, increasing trends, and variable patterns across countries at the same level of development. GBD 2016 findings show that, while it has huge potential to improve health, risk modification has played a relatively small part in the past decade.
KW - Risk Factors Study - Disease
KW - Risk Factors Study - Injuries
KW - Global Burden of Diseases
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85031722400&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://purl.org/au-research/grants/NHMRC/1037196
UR - http://purl.org/au-research/grants/NHMRC/1056929
UR - http://purl.org/au-research/grants/NHMRC/1042600
U2 - 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)32366-8
DO - 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)32366-8
M3 - Article
C2 - 28919119
AN - SCOPUS:85031722400
SN - 0140-6736
VL - 390
SP - 1345
EP - 1422
JO - The Lancet
JF - The Lancet
IS - 10100
ER -