1. Global reporting of pulmonary embolism-related deaths in the World Health Organization mortality database
- Author
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Barco, S., Valerio, L., Gallo, A., Turatti, G., Mahmoudpour, S.H., Ageno, W., Castellucci, L.A., Cesarman-Maus, G., Ddungu, H., Paula, E.V. de, Dumantepe, M., Goldhaber, S.Z., Esposito, M.C.G., Klok, F.A., Kucher, N., McLintock, C., Ainle, F.N., Simioni, P., Spirk, D., Spyropoulos, A.C., Urano, T., Zhai, Z.G., Hunt, B.J., and Konstantinides, S.V.
- Subjects
pulmonary embolism ,610 Medical sciences ,venous thromboembolism ,610 Medizin ,epidemiology ,World Health Organization ,mortality - Abstract
Introduction: Pulmonary embolism (PE) has not been accounted for as a cause of death contributing to cause-specific mortality in global reports.Methods: We analyzed global PE-related mortality by focusing on the latest year available for each member state in the World Health Organization (WHO) mortality database, which provides age-sex-specific aggregated mortality data transmitted by national authorities for each underlying cause of death. PE-related deaths were defined by International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision codes for acute PE or nonfatal manifestations of venous thromboembolism (VTE). The 2001 WHO standard population served for standardization.Results: We obtained data from 123 countries covering a total population of 2 602 561 422. Overall, 50 (40.6%) were European, 39 (31.7%) American, 13 (10.6%) Eastern Mediterranean, 13 (10.6%) Western Pacific, 3 (2.4%) Southeast Asian, and 2 (1.6%) African. Of 116 countries classifiable according to population income, 57 (49.1%) were high income, 42 (36.2%) upper-middle income, 14 (12.1%) lower-middle income, and 3 (2.6%) low income. A total of 18 726 382 deaths were recorded, of which 86 930 (0.46%) were attributed to PE. PE-related mortality rate increased with age in most countries. The reporting of PE-related deaths was heterogeneous, with an age-standardized mortality rate ranging from 0 to 24 deaths per 100 000 population-years. Income status only partially explained this heterogeneity.Conclusions: Reporting of PE-related mortality in official national vital registration was characterized by extreme heterogeneity across countries. These findings mandate enhanced efforts toward systematic and uniform coverage of PE-related mortality and provides a case for full recognition of PE and VTE as a primary cause of death.
- Published
- 2021