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Incidence, prevalence and disability associated with neurological disorders in Italy between 1990 and 2019: an analysis based on the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019

Authors :
Claudia Toppo
Francesca Giulia Magnani
Stefano Ricci
Elisabetta Pupillo
Matilde Leonardi
Valeria Caso
Alberto Raggi
Valery L. Feigin
Rui Ma
Ettore Beghi
Theo Vos
Paola Santalucia
Giancarlo Logroscino
Marco Piccininni
Giulio Castelpietra
Silvia Schiavolin
Emma Nichols
Giorgia Giussani
Jaimie D Steinmetz
Davide Sattin
Stefania Mondello
Luca Ronfani
Lorenzo Monasta
Eugenio Traini
Raggi, A.
Monasta, L.
Beghi, E.
Caso, V.
Castelpietra, G.
Mondello, S.
Giussani, G.
Logroscino, G.
Magnani, F. G.
Piccininni, M.
Pupillo, E.
Ricci, S.
Ronfani, L.
Santalucia, P.
Sattin, D.
Schiavolin, S.
Toppo, C.
Traini, E.
Steinmetz, J.
Nichols, E.
Ma, R.
Vos, T.
Feigin, V.
Leonardi, M.
Source :
J Neurol
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Zenodo, 2021.

Abstract

Background: Neurological conditions are highly prevalent and disabling, in particular in the elderly. The Italian population has witnessed sharp ageing and we can thus expect a rising trend in the incidence, prevalence and disability of these conditions. Methods: We relied on the Global Burden of Disease 2019 study to extract Italian data on incidence, prevalence and years lived with a disability (YLDs) referred to a broad set of neurological disorders including, brain and nervous system cancers, stroke, encephalitis, meningitis, tetanus, traumatic brain injury, and spinal cord injury. We assessed changes between 1990 and 2019 in counts and age-standardized rates. Results: The most prevalent conditions were tension-type headache, migraine, and dementias, whereas the most disabling were migraine, dementias and traumatic brain injury. YLDs associated with neurological conditions increased by 22.5%, but decreased by 2.3% in age-standardized rates. The overall increase in prevalence and YLDs counts was stronger for non-communicable diseases with onset in old age compared to young to adult-age onset ones. The same trends were in the opposite direction when age-standardized rates were taken into account. Conclusions: The increase in YLDs associated with neurological conditions is mostly due to population ageing and growth: nevertheless, lived disability and, as a consequence, impact on health systems has increased. Actions are needed to improve outcome and mitigate disability associated with neurological conditions, spanning among diagnosis, treatment, care pathways and workplace interventions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
J Neurol
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....331c3e5ec287f34cc8fc4fe947e93357
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6385563